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I'm not a fan of Texan electrical isolationism, but "people dying every winter from power outages" is stretching it a bit...
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Every winter is a stretch, yes.

But they did get a big warning shot in 1989 and 2011, and ignored those lessons for cost reasons. A couple hundred people died.

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> But they did get a big warning shot in 1989 and 2011, and ignored those lessons for cost reasons.

Cost is always a valid reason!

> A couple hundred people died.

Looks like about a thousand people in the US die of hypothermia every year, on average. So this happens frequently in states that aren't in its own interconnection, too.

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> Looks like about a thousand people in the US die of hypothermia every year, on average.

In their powerless homes?

I don't doubt people get lost in the woods. But that's not some systemic failure.

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Which actually works out to rather more than one person per winter, when averaged out.
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Like all the Canadians who die every winter in the Halifax explosion of 1917.
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Ya, it was just one winter where people actually died, it was recent though.
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