Austin Energy estimates it earned $54 million during Texas freeze


Decker Creek Power Station is one of five power plants owned or co-owned by Austin Energy.  The city utility says its plants continued generating power during last month's winter weather.

Austin Energy estimates it earned $54 million in net revenue from last month’s Texas freeze, but the city-owned utility raised doubts about actually collecting that amount because other electricity providers in the state were decimated financially and might not be able to pay their bills.

As power-generating plants across Texas were failing during the wave of sub-freezing temperatures, Austin Energy was ordered by the Electric Reliability Council of Texas – the entity that oversees the grid and is commonly known as ERCOT – to shed a significant amount of energy demand as the state’s power grid came close to a full shutdown.

But at a time when residents in more than 220,000 Austin homes shivered in the dark, the power-generating plants operated by Austin Energy mostly held up and continued to pump energy into the state’s electric grid. The confluence of these events allowed Austin Energy to consistently generate more energy than it used during the weather event – and during the period when ERCOT raised wholesale prices to the maximum level allowable of $9,000 per megawatt hour. 



Read More:Austin Energy estimates it earned $54 million during Texas freeze

2021-03-09 22:42:43

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