Originally posted by Leo Enticknap
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I remember large parts of Germany and some parts of the Netherlands getting "the wrong kind of ice" about a year or 15 ago. Many power mainlines went down back then, causing long-lasting outages for some regions, because their pylons simply sagged under the load of ice that had build-up around them, due to foggy conditions combined with freezing temperatures. While it will certainly be possible to design infrastructure that avoids such icing buildup or can handle the load, those things were never considered when this infrastructure was put in place. While it's often easy to lay the blame somewhere, in reality, there are often multiple factors at hand, some of which might be genuinely unforeseen, others are just being factored within as an "acceptable scenario".
While Texas might be a prime example of how stuff can go wrong if you let some mighty corporations do their thing, it's not like those same things cannot happen anywhere else. Texas might be a somewhat unique scenario, with their own, pretty isolated power grid, but large, synchronized grids have also seen their failure modes.
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