And this is relevant to Debian users (and the rest of the world) how?

On 14/05/2022 15:23, ghe2001 wrote:
[T]he Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) has asked consumers to 
scale back energy use to make up for six power-generation facilities that 
failed just before a hot weekend.

Most of Texas is on its own power grid, a decision made in the 1930s to keep it 
clear of federal regulation. This isolation means both that it avoids federal 
regulation and that it cannot import more electricity during periods of high 
demand. To keep electricity prices low, ERCOT did not prepare its equipment for 
freezing weather, and in February 2021 the Texas electric grid failed during a 
cold wave, leaving more than 3 million people without electricity or heat. Two 
hundred and forty-six people died, while El Paso, which is not part of ERCOT 
and is instead linked to a larger grid that includes other states and thus is 
regulated, had weatherized its equipment and its customers lost power only 
briefly.

The problem didn’t stop there. The then–chief executive officer of ERCOT 
recently testified that Texas governor Greg Abbott told ERCOT to keep the 
wholesale price of electricity at an astonishing $9000 per megawatt-hour (one 
study said this was $6,578 too high) for about three days longer than needed, 
thus overcharging customers by about $26.3 billion.

That money did not appear to fix the system. In June 2021, mechanical failures 
during a heat wave pushed the state to the verge of blackouts and prompted 
ERCOT to ask people to turn their AC to higher temperatures, turn off their 
lights, and avoid using appliances that take a lot of electricity. Now, less 
than a year later, the system is in trouble again.

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