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Power United States

Gas Sellers Reaped $11 Billion Windfall During Texas Freeze (bloomberg.com) 120

The official autopsy of the great Texas winter blackout of February 2021 quickly established a clear timeline of events: Electric utilities cut off power to customers and distributors as well as natural gas producers, which in turn triggered a negative feedback loop that sunk the state deeper and deeper into frigid darkness. It's now becoming clear that while millions of Texans endured days of power cuts, the state's gas producers contributed to fuel shortages, allowing pipelines and traders to profit handsomely off them. From a report: Interviews with energy executives and an analysis of public records by Bloomberg News show that natural gas producers in the Permian shale basin began to drastically reduce output days before power companies cut them off. As the flow of gas cratered, everyone scrambled to secure enough supply, sparking one of the wildest price surges in history. Power producers were forced to pay top dollar in the spot market for whatever gas they could find. Soon customers will be saddled with the bill.

And it's a big one: The total comes to about $11.1 billion for a storm that lasted for just five days, according to estimates by BloombergNEF analysts Jade Patterson and Nakul Nair. The cost of gas for power generation alone was about $8.1 billion, or 75 times normal levels. A further $3 billion was spent by utilities providing gas for cooking, heating and fireplaces. The BNEF estimate is based on spot prices at major hubs assessed by S&P Global Platts rather than private contracts, so is likely an upper limit of the total cost. Millions of Texans are now faced with the prospect of paying higher gas prices for years as utilities seek to spread the cost over a decade or more. Texas lawmakers have set aside $10 billion to help natural gas utilities cover their natural gas costs from the storm through low-interest, state-backed bonds.

A special legislative session convened Thursday but the agenda did not include any measures to fix the power grid. This week, Governor Greg Abbott appeared to double down on his early assessment that wind and solar were prime culprits of the freeze. Even though gas failed in its role as a reliable backup fuel during the freeze, Abbott pushed regulators in a letter to strengthen incentives for fossil fuel and nuclear generators while increasing "reliability costs" for intermittent renewable power sources. What Abbott didn't mention was the massive windfall key industry players made during the freeze. Energy Transfer posted its highest quarterly net income on record, more than three times its previous best quarter.

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Gas Sellers Reaped $11 Billion Windfall During Texas Freeze

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  • by kot-begemot-uk ( 6104030 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @03:45PM (#61582807) Homepage
    Executive summary - that is why normal countries regulate utilities. If you do not regulate them, they rape you, skin you, dump you to freeze and then you pay for this privilege.
    • Darn. Who knew Comcast was so harsh.

    • by burtosis ( 1124179 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @04:15PM (#61582933)

      Executive summary - that is why normal countries regulate utilities. If you do not regulate them, they rape you, skin you, dump you to freeze and then you pay for this privilege.

      But I don’t understand... They saved tens if not hundreds of millions not equipping their systems with basic winterization options that would have avoided all this! At least they then made a years profit in a day or two, got totally let off the hook for everything including all the damage to houses, and still can still charge more than average - that ought to teach em’ a valuable lesson they won’t soon forget.

      • Third party companies are the ones profiting here. I think you took Sellers to mean the singular electric utility company.
      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @04:24PM (#61582961)

        They saved tens if not hundreds of millions not equipping their systems with basic winterization options that would have avoided all this!

        The companies that reaped the biggest profits were those that DID winterize and were prepared to continue delivering energy while their competitors failed and dropped out of the market.

        Wind companies that continued to operate also reaped generous profits, but a headline that says "Evil renewable energy companies raped Texans" isn't as politically popular as demonizing gas companies.

        • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @04:39PM (#61583019) Homepage Journal

          Unlike the crooked gas companies (note, I am not claiming that ALL of the gas companies were crooked), the renewable producers didn't choose to cut production in advance to drive a price spike.

        • by fredrated ( 639554 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @06:36PM (#61583393) Journal

          You aren't paying attention. "Evil renewable energy companies raped Texans" is the claim of Texas Republicans.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            This highlights one of the biggest problems we have these days. People get into a new bubble and believe this stuff, even though it's been widely debunked. The debunking simply doesn't enter their personal news feed, or if it does it tends to be via right wing commentators claiming that it's false.

            The Republicans and some other right wing parties (like the Tories in the UK) have found that they can manipulate people this way and we don't have an effective response to it.

        • Wind companies that continued to operate also reaped generous profits, but a headline that says "Evil renewable energy companies raped Texans" isn't as politically popular as demonizing gas companies.

          Dude, chill. You're mixing things up, this story isn't about gas generators making a profit, it's about gas producers. Sure, the remaining online gas generators, like the remaining wind and solar were on the selling end of those high power prices and made some profits I guess.

          So when gas demand is low because gas generation is severely diminished, why would gas prices spike? We've heard that wells were freezing, and the article mentions they also had problems with the power blackouts too that created a n

      • by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @04:55PM (#61583087)

        Because their fossil fuels and no one is Texas is allowed to criticize them. They will refuse to see natural gas as "intermittent" energy even though the wind power was performing very well compared to them during that time. Politics is more important than lives here, better some people freeze to death than admit that diversified power options are a good thing. The laisse-faire free market at work.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      It's almost like they learned nothing from Enron.
    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @05:55PM (#61583271)

      This is a very American story. An uncontrolled free market performs poorly, the government provides free money to the corporations involved and everyone goes back to espousing the wonders of the free market.

    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      Normal countries regulate commodities markets and producers as well

      This artificial shortage affected other states beyond the one with no regulation.... New Mexico... Louisiana.... ALL Of these states the local utilities here have a HUGE Fuel adjustment that is being spread out over a long period of time.

      IMO There should be an investigation into and possible lawsuits against the Gas Producers Over this flagrant margket manipulation.
      Artificially cutting their output --- Who is our market reg

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      In order for things to be dependable, they need to be regulated. Otherwise greed and stupidity takes over. If you do not regulate important infrastructure, you will eventually find yourself on 3rd world-levels.

  • by FeriteCore ( 25122 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @03:48PM (#61582817)

    Sounds like a positive feedback loop. A negative feedback loop would have reduced the problem.

    • I was wondering who would get that. Negative means diminishing. The only negative feedback loop was the supply of energy, not the price. Its like 'Negative Reinforcement'. There are people thst think that means slapping or beating someone with a belt. Negative means to remove something and reinforcement is what you do to obtain a behavior you WANT. Negative Reinforcement is saying "Because you did such a great job cleaning up after lunch, there will be no homework tonight"
  • by Anonymous Coward

    surrounding things such as price gouging during emergencies?

    Oh ya, this is the Retardicans... Taking any company to court, especially one that gives a politician a five'er and a Hinkelman is an anthima to them. All regulations are bad! Renewables are Bad! Big Oil/Gas can never do wrong! All Hail the Orange One - for only he can save us from ourselves (while he pockets the profits).

    • by BytePusher ( 209961 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @04:02PM (#61582875) Homepage
      Nah, they don't have any such ideology as "all regulations are bad". They would regulate the fuck out of any business or individual that doesn't contribute to their own wealth and power. And that's where liberals are brain dead. They think this is a battle of ideologies, where the best ideology will win in the end. So liberals play by "the rules," but conservatives don't because the only rule they have is do whatever you can get away with.
      • by spun ( 1352 ) <[moc.oohay] [ta] [yranoituloverevol]> on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @04:24PM (#61582959) Journal

        Liberals are the Washington Generals to the conservatives' Harlem Globetrotters. Both have the same owner, the wealthiest .01%. The Washington Generals are paid to lose, to make the Globetrotters look like a legit team. But you'll never see the ref call them for carrying, or hiding the ball. Liberals only look weak if you think they are playing to win. They aren't.

      • Keep drinking the coolaid. One day you will realize its two sides of the same coin. Asking for ID to buy alcohol, to vote, to buy a firearm, is a form of regulation. Asking to see someones certification for their goddamn therapy alligator they want to bring into a preschool is also a form of regulation. There are some regulations liberals are also against because it violates the desires and ideology of some of their donors too. At the end of the day you have two groups, both Karens, wanting to nanny shit th
      • by Jeremi ( 14640 )

        Hey, somebody's got to play by the rules, otherwise there are no rules and we go straight to civil war. I'm not sure what strategy you'd recommend, but if it involves large amounts of bloodshed, I'm against it.

      • by maynard ( 3337 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @05:46PM (#61583235) Journal

        Liberals play by the rules because to do otherwise is to reinforce the very lawlessness and kleptocracy they oppose. Gaming the system ultimately breaks the system.

      • Everyone agrees that "all regulations are bad". It is a question of what is worse, the regulation or what the regulation is trying to prevent / odds of it occurring.

        The only difference between Democrats and Republicans are their priorities. But even their priorities do not differ by that much. However the media consumed by Republicans tends to be controlled corporate entities that are more interested in pushing the "regulations are bad" point of view then actual truth. It is self serving and dishones

      • So liberals play by "the rules," but conservatives don't because the only rule they have is do whatever you can get away with.

        If you lower yourself to your opponent's level, you will lose.

    • You might want to read this. [deseret.com]

      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        The Mormons? Really?

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        All removing the anti gouging laws would do is change the headline to "Couldn't afford toilet paper during the pandemic?" or perhaps "Still paying off the toilet paper you bought during the pandemic?".

        Arguably the problem would have been worse due to added incentive to make toilet paper appear scarce to collect that sweet gouging windfall.

        Well enforced anti-gouging laws discourage the horde and profit model. Notye that a few of the jackasses that bought thousands of dollars worth of toilet paper were prosec

        • Yup, anti gouging regulation would mean the price spikes would be illegal, or at least limited. Going on market rate alone is a problem when the same groups that profit can control the availability and much of the consumption. Notice the freeze is coming so a spike is expected, that's a problem when the energy companies choose the moment to reduce supply. And with reduced (partially self-induced) availability the market rate skyrocketed.
  • A special legislative session convened Thursday but the agenda did not include any measures to fix the power grid.

    Did all the Democrats [youtu.be] make it back in time?

  • by Fly Swatter ( 30498 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @03:54PM (#61582835) Homepage
    I know, it's a stupid question but: why is there no utility price cap? FFS even the stock market halts trades when shit hits the fan.

    Allowing the price to fix the supply/demand problem when there is no supply is kind of stupid. S T U P I D.
    • Least you all can get GPUs now.

    • by BytePusher ( 209961 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @04:04PM (#61582885) Homepage
      Stock market halts are to keep rich people from becoming poor. In this case rich people are becoming richer. That's why.
    • Cali has an equally crazy price scheme ive been told by many EV owners here. When demand is high the price floats up. They arent fixed prices and fluctuate with demand. I live in the midwest with both red and blue history. We have real fixed pricing. If you are going to come up with this billing process like texas/cali that is clearly tilted toward financial elites and a punishment to lower class people, the least they could do is set a max possible rate that only an act of god or state congress can overrid
      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @04:46PM (#61583043)

        Cali has an equally crazy price scheme I've been told by many EV owners here.

        California flex pricing is OPT-IN. It only applies to you if you request it.

        I have an EV, and I am on flex pricing. I charge the vehicle from 2 to 4 am when prices are lowest. I avoid using excess energy from 2 to 7 pm when prices spike.

        It works well for me.

        If you don't want flex pricing, don't sign up for it.

      • You're talking Time Of Use? That was opt-out for some utilities, but that's about end-users (home-owners). Whereas the Texas energy market was about the utilities and power suppliers, a completely different game. The TOU means higher prices at certain peak hours and lower prices at other times. So do the laundry in the evening, etc.

        In California the rates are fixed for the year, assuming some estimated usage and a sliver for profits. Then the utilities get extra profit by cutting costs. They cannot ju

      • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @10:55PM (#61583709)

        Whut.

        Everyone in Texas basically chooses their power plan.

        You can go with short term contracts. ( ~3 months )
        You can go with longer term contracts. ( up to 36 months )
        You can even go with variable rates if you are inclined to do so.
        Some simple math ( or some spreadsheet formulas ) will show you what the plans actually cost.
        ( Just plug in the numbers and see for yourself )

        Most go with a flat rate. None of this " tiered " or " peak / off peak " bullshit.
        ( Unless you just really feel the need to )

        For example, I'm on a fixed plan for three years at 12 cents per KwH. Summer, Winter, middle of the day or three am.
        Doesn't matter. 12 cents / KwH ( Yes, even during the big freeze )

        Don't take my word for it, go look yourself.
        ( http://powertochoose.org/en-us [powertochoose.org] )

        Feed it a Texas zip-code and pick your plan.
        It's pretty much that simple.

        What was unamusing during the freeze was while the power was getting turned off to the suburbs, the downtown metro
        areas were lit up like a Christmas tree burning power like nothing was going on at all.

        • Some simple math

          Have you seen the education system in America? What you propose isn't viable for most.

    • I know, it's a stupid question but: why is there no utility price cap?

      Because a price cap isn't going to magically make extra energy appear.

      For a fixed supply, you need either high prices or rationing. There was no infrastructure in place to implement rationing. Texas doesn't have an extra 30 million police officers to stand guard and watch everyone's electric meter.

      FFS even the stock market halts trades when shit hits the fan.

      What? Are you saying the electric companies should have shutdown? How would that have helped?

      • "Because a price cap isn't going to magically make extra energy appear."

        An uncapped price isn't going to magically make extra energy appear either.

        "For a fixed supply, you need either high prices or rationing. "

        If the supply is fixed, then changing the price does nothing. A price increase is only market-efficient if that means you can bring new supply online that was unprofitable at the market-clearing price before the shock and do it before the shock goes away.

        This is all uncontroversial to actual capitali

        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          If the supply is fixed, high prices mean that the people who most want power, get it. The price increases until the demand (at that price) matches supply.

          The free market is about allocating resources. The alternatives are schemes where an authority decides who gets what, lotteries, etc.

          • Not necessarily. For example those affected could form an organization or a voting bloc to decide these things. Very similar to the way a credit union works, all the members pay in, all the members get a say.

            This is how "socialism" actually works in most countries with mixed economies.

            In the USA, the question boils down to, would you rather be bossed around by the government, or bossed around by some private companies that are in it only for money?

            (it's funny to watch nut jobs start frothing at the mouth wh

            • would you rather be bossed around by the government, or bossed around by some private companies that are in it only for money?

              I definitely prefer private companies.

              I can cut my electric bill by using less electricity.

              I can't cut my tax bill by using less government.

            • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

              That would be an authority. The authority can be a person, an organization, an algorithm, whatever.

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          "For a fixed supply, you need either high prices or rationing. "

          If the supply is fixed, then changing the price does nothing. A price increase is only market-efficient if that means you can bring new supply online that was unprofitable at the market-clearing price before the shock and do it before the shock goes away.

          That's not entirely true. A price increase can also trigger rationing by making power companies with smaller nest eggs shut down entirely rather than go bankrupt. It's not a very equitable kind of rationing, but it is rationing. :-)

          Also, some industrial companies that buy bulk power almost certainly shut down rather than go bankrupt for the same reason. So that's also rationing triggered by price.

          And EVs and Powerwalls and other systems that decide whether to charge based on the price also would have sto

      • They can do rolling blackouts, that is rationing. Granted, in this situation even that would/did not help. The problem during this disaster wasn't the disaster itself. It was the profiteering from a broken pricing system. Now everyone except those truly unprepared for the cold weather (the fuel suppliers) are stuck with an unrealistic bill.

        The price cap would protect against bankrupting a portion of the companies that provide for the infrastructure, infrastructure meant for the good of the public. Alas c
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        What you need is nationalized generation. Electricity is a basic necessity of life now, it's infrastructure like roads and water supply.

        Either private companies have to be heavily regulated to keep the lights on, or you have to nationalize it. Anything else just means they will find some way to fuck you.

    • I know, it's a stupid question but: why is there no utility price cap?

      Price cap! GET OUT SOCIALIST! This is CAPITALISM. The free market can solve all problems, and if it doesn't then Jesus will. We don't need your gubbmint here.

    • Because the regulatory agency is the definition of cronyism. It’s staffed by political appointees and has no real power to regulate anything. All they can do is make recommendations.

    • "why is there no utility price cap?"
      Because the median businessman has no idea how capitalism works and at the 90th percentile they are actively opposed. They don't care about making the market efficient and they still believe every transaction is zero sum. A price cap makes it harder for us to lose so they think that means it makes it harder for them to win.

  • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @03:55PM (#61582841)
    I am shocked private companies exploited a situation for profit in a deregulated, capitalistic system.
    • Oh not surprising [apnews.com] at all. [deseret.com]

      • ... seeks to repeal the state’s Price Controls During Emergencies Act.

        Government limits greed of retailers (price-gouging): Ivory-tower elites complain shortages of merchandise occurred and refuse to blame greed of consumers (panic-buying).

        Concluding bad stuff happened so the law doesn't work, is dishonest. Claiming 'X happened instead, so we should go back to the old system' is demanding perfectionism. That is impossible because businesses and people will arrange themselves to minimize the effect of the law (Eg. misdemeanor fines). Many times, in economic policy, the b

    • And by company, its probably a shell company for 5 stock trading assholes.
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @03:56PM (#61582843)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Thats not surprising at all really. Things like that take years to hash out. The FBI homicide stats are always lagging by 2 years. Just think about all the homeless that were staying warm by hanging around powered areas that suddenly went cold. Those deaths are going to take a while to determine statistical cause of death. They likely wont autopsy to confirm if it was hypothermia, malnutrition, natural causes, or drug/alcohol abuse.
    • How much money did gas sellers make per citizen death?

      I'll do it. $52.4 million in windfall profits for every citizen death.

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @04:02PM (#61582877)

    What do you call it in that country when you kill people for profit?

    • China calls them organ donors. What do you call them?

    • A corporation.

      -Next question!
    • Wednesday
    • If you're poor, middle class, or on the lower to middle rungs of the highly affluent, there are a variety of laws with which to charge you.
      If you're super rich, it's called "leadership."

      France once had a "leadership" purge. I think they were ahead of their time.

    • Business as usual. So long as nobody that died had enough money in their family to be able to afford to sue the entity making the profit into the ground, it's nothing and matters not one little iota.

    • What do you call it in that country when you kill people for profit?

      American Healthcare is the colloquial term.

  • The utilities have to buy electricity if they can at up to $9/kwh (the ERCOT MAX). They are then selling it to consumers at sometimes less than $0.25. The gas electric generator companies will buy natural gas as long as it is profitable. On a day when the spot price for electricity is 9 cents they will pay X per cubic meter if the spot price is $9 then they will pay 100X. This is pretty simple economics. The flaw is that the utilities are subsidizing the consumers. The consumers would not consume as m
    • ...or pass the price on to consumers and give the consumers the choice to reduce consumption or pay $9+ per kwh.

      Or make price gouging of energy during a crisis a felony with harsh penalties that start and the top and roll downhill, and watch this particular problem exist only in history textbooks.

      • State crime. Its a state level issued state of emergency. And thus state laws have standing to enforce. Federal laws cannot charge you for gouging during a state issued state of emergency. They lack standing.
      • What they could do, if they felt like wasting time and resources on a likely publicly embarrassing but otherwise unwinnable case. Use the RICO act and charge them for extortion and racketeering the way you charge mobsters. Unfortunately they have more attorneys than mobsters.
    • " The consumers would not consume as much if they had to pay 100X more. "

      This is Texas we're talking about. Air Conditioning is pretty much a mandatory thing where Summer temps typically hover close to triple digits and the humidity ( especially near the coast ) likes to hang around 75%. Put it this way, just walking to the end of your driveway to get the mail and you'll be sweating before you get back inside.

      Make no mistake, we wouldn't run the AC if we didn't have to but, that's not how it works down h

  • Blood money (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Pollux ( 102520 ) <speter@[ ]ata.net.eg ['ted' in gap]> on Wednesday July 14, 2021 @04:21PM (#61582957) Journal

    A special legislative session convened Thursday but the agenda did not include any measures to fix the power grid.

    From the looks of things, it looks like Texas views 16 total cases of voting fraud in 2020 [washingtonpost.com] as a much bigger priority than a few hundred people dying [houstonpublicmedia.org] from stormy weather every once in a while (or more, depending on who's counting [buzzfeednews.com]).

    • There's an easy way to fix that. Just make sure the dead post ballots after they die. Then republicans will take notice.

  • Well, as my college roommate (from Juneau) used to say, "Texas is now the country's 3rd-largest state -- they cut Alaska in half!"
  • Any slashdot conservatives wish to speak up on how this was all the fault of windmills?

    • If there are 10 customers wanting to buy 10 gallons each and you have only 40 left, why not sell to highest bidder? What next, force supermarkets sell live lobsters for 5 dollars a pound because most people can't afford 20-25 dollars a pound?

  • and solar, and moving to fine them for causing the power outages when it's been proven that it was caused by lack of weatherization (in the winter) and not enough capacity due to Texas' refusal to connect to other state's networks because they didn't want to have to make their network reliable enough to be allowed to connect (yes, I know Texas has a different power grid, there are ways around that and while they're costly it beats rolling blackouts).

    TL;DR; they're actively ignoring reality.
  • As the flow of gas cratered, everyone scrambled to secure enough supply, sparking one of the wildest price surges in history. Power producers were forced to pay top dollar in the spot market for whatever gas they could find. Soon customers will be saddled with the bill.

    During the same period the price of wind and sunlight remained rock steady at USD 0.00 per unit for anybody foresightful enough to be an operator of weather proofed wind and solar based electricity generation equipment.

  • to balance the grid?

    Hint: It wasn't freezing everywhere in the continental US that week.

    Is it, by any chance, because the powers that be can't get their f**king act together?

    Power grid reliability is a national-level national security concern. It's frankly both sad and hilarious that this is exclusively managed locally in little fiefdoms these days.
    • As I understand it, Most all of the country *is* interconnected, and does just fine. Texas chooses not to interconnect with anyone because "Muh freedoms!!" (e.g they don't want any Federal "interference" in their state)

      I have long since concluded that perhaps the Feds ought to come up with a minimum acceptable standard of living that anyone can aspire to. And then make that standard a prerequisite to be a part of the union.

      That was the intent of the original Fair Labor and Minimum Wage acts. Roosevelt ac

  • {SUCH AND SUCH PUBLIC COMPANY} posted its highest quarterly net income on record, more than three times its previous best quarter.

    Insights like this are a reason some private equity targets quasi-monopolies. No market reporting means data like this stays private and hidden from public view.

  • My gas bill pre-freeze was about $46/month. Right now it is averaging $205/month since the freeze. The legislature well and truly screwed the citizens of Texas.

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