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Texans will pay for decades as crisis tacks billions onto bills
Mark Chediak, Naureen S. Malik and Josh Saul, Bloomberg News
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Now that the lights are back on in Texas, the state has to figure out whoâs going to pay for the energy crisis that plunged millions into darkness last week. It will likely be ordinary Texans.
The price tag so far: US$50.6 billion, the cost of electricity sold from early Monday, when the blackouts began, to Friday morning, according to BloombergNEF estimates. That compares with US$4.2 billion for the prior week.
CaliforniaUnited-statesUniversity-of-houstonTexasRice-universitySan-antonioFranceTexansFrenchCaliforniansAaron-arguelloJulie-cohnNow that the lights are back on in Texas, the state has to figure out who’s going to pay for the energy crisis that plunged millions into darkness last week. It will likely be ordinary Texans. The price tag so far: $50.6 billion, the cost of electricity sold from early Monday, when the blackouts began, to Friday morning, according to BloombergNEF estimates. That compares with $4.2 billion for the prior week. Some of those costs have already fallen onto consumers as electricity customers exposed to wholesale prices wracked up power bills as high as $8,000 last week. Other customers won’t know what they’re in for until they receive their gas and power bills at the end of the month. Ultimately, the financial pain will probably be shared by ratepayers and taxpayers alike, said Michael Webber, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin and chief science officer for French power company Engie SA.
CaliforniaUnited-statesUniversity-of-houstonTexasRice-universitySan-antonioFranceTexansFrenchCaliforniansAaron-arguelloJulie-cohn