New Report: 2021’s Winter Storm Uri Didn’t Need To Be So Deadly and Expensive

Sierra Club Identifies Six Key Takeaways for Advocates and Public Officials
Contact

Edward Smith, edward.smith@sierraclub.org 

Oklahoma City, OK -- A new report published today by the Sierra Club identifies key lessons to be learned from 2021’s Winter Storm Uri, which left over seven hundred people dead and caused approximately $200 billion in damages. One year after the tragedy, the report finds that regulators and policymakers have done little to address the underlying vulnerabilities and inequities that led to nearly 10 million people losing power during sub-freezing temperatures. 

While the gas industry and some public officials were quick to blame the power outages on wind and solar, later analysis showed that the gas system was the primary source of the grid’s failures. The price of gas sailed to astronomical highs during the storm, forcing utilities and homeowners to incur massive debts, and prompting investigations into price gouging. Millions of Americans from Texas to Minnesota will be paying higher gas bills for decades to come due to the gas system’s failures during this period, making the report relevant to Oklahoma.

In particular, this report identifies six key ways that public officials at local, state, and federal levels could address the failings that allowed Winter Storm Uri to cause such extensive damage:

  1. Increase Energy Efficiency, to allow the same amount of electricity to go further;

  2. Implement Demand Response, to intelligently shift when and where electricity is used;

  3. Protect and Improve the Grid, to create a smarter energy system, ensure existing power generation can coexist with clean and distributed energy sources, and ensure that localized issues (such as outages due to extreme weather events) don't spread across the entire grid;

  4. Increase Access to Clean Energy, to ensure that all communities can enjoy its benefits;

  5. Foster More Public Input, to guarantee that individuals and communities (not just utilities and large corporations) have a voice in any and all regulatory decisions; and

  6. Learn from Past Mistakes, so that the lessons learned from Winter Storm Uri—as well as from past extreme weather events like those in 2011 and 1989—are used to create a cleaner, more resilient grid.

Sierra Club filed comments with the Oklahoma Corporation Commission last year encouraging it to make changes so it’s easier for the public to participate. 

Statement from Cheyenne Skye Branscum, Chapter Chair of the Oklahoma Sierra Club: 

“The climate crisis isn’t just a problem for the next generation. It’s impacting Oklahoma right now and it’s causing more extreme weather, including winter storms. While we may not have been hit as hard by Winter Storm Uri as people living in Texas, the tragedy highlights the importance of modernizing our entire electric grid and transitioning from fossil fuels to 100% clean, renewable energy. Likewise, we must increase community engagement in energy policy, particularly in Black, Indigenous, and Hispanic communities, all of which have historically been left out of the conversation.”

About the Sierra Club

The Sierra Club is America’s largest and most influential grassroots environmental organization, with millions of members and supporters. In addition to protecting every person's right to get outdoors and access the healing power of nature, the Sierra Club works to promote clean energy, safeguard the health of our communities, protect wildlife, and preserve our remaining wild places through grassroots activism, public education, lobbying, and legal action. For more information, visit www.sierraclub.org.