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Et Tu, Ted? Why Deregulation Failed

  
Via:  Bob Nelson  •  4 years ago  •  6 comments

By:   Paul Krugman - The New York Times

Et Tu, Ted? Why Deregulation Failed
Even Senator Cruz realizes kilowatt-hours aren't like avocados.

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Deregulation

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Consequences


S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



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Nobody is ever fully prepared for natural disaster. When hurricanes, blizzards or tsunamis strike they always reveal weaknesses — failure to plan, failure to invest in precautions.

The disaster in Texas, however, was different. The collapse of the Texas power grid didn't just reveal a few shortcomings. It showed that the entire philosophy behind the state's energy policy is wrong. And it also showed that the state is run by people who will resort to blatant lies rather than admit their mistakes.

Texas isn't the only state with a largely deregulated electricity market. It has, however, pushed deregulation further than anyone else. There is an upper limit on wholesale electricity prices, but it's stratospherically high. And there is essentially no prudential regulation — no requirements that utilities maintain reserve capacity or invest in things like insulation to limit the effects of extreme weather.

The theory was that no such regulation was necessary, because the magic of the market would take care of everything. After all, a surge in demand or a disruption of supply — both of which happened in the deep freeze — will lead to high prices, and hence to big profits for any power supplier that manages to keep operating. So there should be incentives to invest in robust systems, precisely to take advantage of events like those Texas just experienced.

Texas energy policy was based on the idea that you can treat electricity like avocados. Do people remember the great avocado shortage of 2019? Surging demand and a bad crop in California led to spiking prices; but nobody called for a special inquest and new regulations on avocado producers.

In fact, some people see nothing wrong with what happened in Texas in the past week. William Hogan, the Harvard professor widely considered the architect of the Texas system, asserted that drastic price increases, while "not convenient," were how the system was supposed to work.

But kilowatt-hours aren't avocados, and there are at least three big reasons pretending that they are is a recipe for disaster.

First, electricity is essential to modern life in a way few other commodities can match. Having to go without avocado toast won't kill you; having to go without electricity, especially when your house relies on it for heat, can.

And it's extremely doubtful whether even the prospect of sky-high profits during a shortage offers energy suppliers enough incentive to take the huge human and economic costs of a protracted power outage into account.

Second, electricity is supplied by a system — and precautionary investment by one player in the system does no good if the other players fail to do the same. Even if the owner of a gas-fired power plant insulates and winterizes its turbines, it can't function if the gas pipeline that supplies its fuel, or the wellhead that provides the gas, freeze up.

So does the free market ensure that the whole system works under stress? Probably not.

Last but not least, a system that depends on the incentives offered by extremely high prices in times of crisis isn't workable, practically or politically.

At first, those Texans who didn't lose power in the big freeze considered themselves lucky. But then the bills arrived — and some families found themselves being charged thousands of dollars for a few days of electricity.

Many families probably can't afford to pay those bills, so we're potentially looking at a wave of personal bankruptcies. And even those who don't face ruin are, predictably, outraged.

Possibly the most revealing remark of the Texas crisis so far was a tweet by, of all people, Senator Ted Cruz (R-Cancun), who fumed that "no power company should get a windfall because of a natural disaster" and called on "state and local regulators" to "prevent this injustice."

The senator, not known for self-awareness, may not realize what he did there. But if even Ted Cruz — Ted Cruz! — believes that regulators should prevent power companies from reaping windfall profits in a disaster, that eliminates any private-sector financial incentive to prepare for such a disaster. And that, in turn, destroys the entire premise behind radical deregulation.

So will the Republicans who hold all of Texas' statewide offices learn from this debacle, and rethink their whole approach to energy policy? Of course not. Their immediate reaction was to falsely blame the crisis on wind power, and lash out at advocates of a Green New Deal — even though something like a Green New Deal, that is, public investment in energy infrastructure, is exactly what Texas needs.

And one thing we've definitely learned over the past few months is that once politicians commit themselves to a Big Lie, whether it involves epidemiology, economics or election results, there's no turning back.

But while the right-wing political-media complex can't and won't learn anything from the Texas power debacle, the rest of us can. We've just been offered a clear view of the dark (and cold) side of free-market fundamentalism. And that's a lesson we shouldn't forget.



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Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
1  seeder  Bob Nelson    4 years ago
Possibly the most revealing remark of the Texas crisis so far was a tweet by, of all people, Senator Ted Cruz (R-Cancun), who fumed that "no power company should get a windfall because of a natural disaster" and called on "state and local regulators" to "prevent this injustice."
 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
1.1  Kavika   replied to  Bob Nelson @1    4 years ago

But I thought that Lyin' Ted was against big government and all in on capitalism. 

 

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
1.1.1  seeder  Bob Nelson  replied to  Kavika @1.1    4 years ago

That's his position.

But he didn't have a script, so he said something logical.

 
 
 
pat wilson
Professor Participates
1.2  pat wilson  replied to  Bob Nelson @1    4 years ago

I loved that "R-Cancun", lol.

 
 
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
2  Split Personality    4 years ago

Funny.

Last Tuesday we were in the third day of below zero nights, minimizing electric use and trickling hot water to the bathrooms on either side of the house

Our Muscovy ducks (geese) were spending the night under the living room window and bunched up against the storm door.

Try as I might to get them in the garage for the night they were having none of it

but stayed close to the front door and we regularly gave them hot water to drink.

In the summer you can't keep them out of the cool garage looking for food or just a nap.

Saturday and Sunday we tried to keep them in the sun by feeding them further and further from the house,

so the snow and ice stuck all over them would melt.

Yesterday and today we had to run the AC in the house.

The geese were finding shade to cool off as the temp rose to 80.

Ha ! Only in Texas.

My ducks/geese are smarter than Ted Cruz.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
2.1  Kavika   replied to  Split Personality @2    4 years ago
My ducks/geese are smarter than Ted Cruz

They sure are, they could fly to Mexico at no charge but they chose to stay and help their neighbors. They also understood that it would be against CDC rules and if they did they would have to go into a 14-day quarantine and that would endanger their close friends the Split Personality family. 

Not only are they smarter than Lyin' Ted but much more compassionate and they are not lawbreakers. 

They would do a better job being a senator from Texas than Lyin' Ted does. 

 
 

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