Tag Archives: Electric

Chip shortage will hit electric car production

A Nio Inc. ES6 electric SUV at a battery swap station inside a parking lot in Shanghai on March 1, 2021.

Qilai Shen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

BEIJING — Chinese electric car start-up Nio said Tuesday a global chip shortage will force it to manufacture fewer cars in the second quarter.

High demand for electronics amid the coronavirus pandemic and pressure from U.S.-China trade tensions on the highly specialized semiconductor supply chain have contributed to a backlog in chip manufacturing.

Major automakers have had to cut production as a result, with China-based Nio the latest to announce such reductions.

The company had ramped up production capacity in February to 10,000 vehicles a month, an increase from 7,500 previously, founder William Li said in a quarterly earnings call Tuesday. But a shortage in chips and batteries means Nio will need to fall back to the 7,500 level in the second quarter, he said.

Nio predicts strong deliveries

Despite competition from Tesla, Nio remained ahead of its start-up rivals in terms of vehicle sales.

The company delivered 7,225 vehicles in January and 5,578 in February amid the week-long Lunar New Year holiday. With a forecast of 20,000 to 25,000 deliveries in the first quarter, Nio anticipates deliveries will rise to at least 7,197 cars in March.

In contrast, Xpeng said Tuesday it delivered 2,223 electric cars last month, while Li Auto expects it will deliver fewer than 4,000 cars a month in the first quarter.

Nio founder Li said that pre-orders for the et7 sedan revealed in January have exceeded that of the company’s other models, but declined to share specific figures. The et7 is Nio’s first non-SUV consumer car and is set to begin deliveries next year.

Li added the company remained on track with plans to enter Europe later this year.

Shares of New York-listed Nio fell 4% in extended-hours trading after reporting a fourth-quarter earnings loss of 0.93 yuan (14 cents) a share. That’s greater than the 0.39 yuan loss per share predicted by analysts, according to FactSet.

The company attributed a nearly 33% quarterly increase in net losses — to 1.39 billion yuan ($212.8 million) in the last three months of 2020 — primarily to the depreciation in the U.S. dollar.

Nio shares soared more than 1,000% last year after the struggling start-up received a roughly $1 billion capital injection from state-backed investors, and traders piled into the stock alongside a surge in Tesla’s shares.

Looking ahead, Nio expects total revenue of 7.38 billion yuan to 7.56 billion yuan in the first quarter, up from 6.64 billion yuan in the fourth quarter.

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Griddy: Texas attorney general sues electric company that sent huge bills during storm

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Mark Majkrzak gives out water bottles to people in Austin, Texas, on Friday, February 19. Majkrzak, the founder of Rain Pure Mountain Spring Water, said he drove from Georgia to deliver the water.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Brendan Waldon repairs a utility pole in Odessa, Texas, on Thursday, February 18.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Deloris Sanchez and Mallissa Lee sit on a couch while taking shelter at a Gallery Furniture store that was serving as a warming station in Houston.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Vehicles are at a standstill Thursday on Interstate 35 in Killeen, Texas.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

City workers repair a busted water main in McComb, Mississippi, on Thursday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Metropolitan Transit Authority workers shovel the stairs of a subway station in New York City on Thursday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Emanuale Small walks up to a bus station in Roanoke, Virginia, on Thursday. Small had to make it to a doctor’s appointment, and he was told they would push the time back a little for him so he could still make it despite the icy conditions.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

People take refuge at a shelter in Galveston, Texas, on Thursday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Cars drive slowly on an icy road in Washington, DC, on Thursday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Jose Blanco fills a cooler with water from a public park spigot in Houston on Thursday. Houston and several surrounding cities were under a boil-water notice.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Snow falls in New York’s Times Square on Thursday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Snow is plowed outside the US Capitol on Thursday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Jonathan Callahan expresses his gratitude after being referred to the warming shelter at the Johnnie Champion Community Center in Jackson, Mississippi, on Wednesday, February 17. Some people staying at the shelter had lost power, water and heat at their homes following the winter storms. Others were homeless. Food, blankets and cots were provided.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Charles Andrews walks home through his neighborhood in Waco, Texas, on Wednesday. Millions of people were still without power.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Nathan Halaney and Katherine Pena help their neighbor, Brenda Davis, from the scene of a nearby structure fire in Austin, Texas, on Wednesday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Eric Traugott warms up his young son, Eric Jr., beside a fire made from a discarded wooden armoire outside of their apartment in Austin on Wednesday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Downed and broken trees are seen over a rest stop in Huntington, West Virginia, on Wednesday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Sara Castillo loads firewood into her car in Dallas on Wednesday. Castillo’s family lost their power on Sunday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Customers wait outside a Home Depot to buy supplies in Pearland, Texas, on Wednesday. The store would let only one person in at a time because it had no power.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

A family in Austin melts snow on their stove so that they could have water to flush toilets and wash dishes on Wednesday. Their electricity had been restored, but they still didn’t have running water.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Kendra Clements visits dog owner Billy Madden — with his dogs Leroy Brown and Underdog — at Tribe Gym, an Oklahoma City gym that has been turned into a temporary homeless shelter.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Manessa Grady adjusts an oil lamp while spending time with her sons Zechariah and Noah at their home in Austin on Tuesday, February 16.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Maria Patterson breastfeeds her infant daughter Tuesday at their home in Austin, which hadn’t had power since Sunday night.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Electric service trucks line up in Fort Worth, Texas, on Tuesday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Karla Perez and Esperanza Gonzalez warm up by a barbecue grill after their power was knocked out in Houston on Tuesday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Jorge Sanhueza-Lyon stands on his kitchen counter to warm his feet over his gas stove in Austin.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Sunlight filters through steam in Omaha, Nebraska, where temperatures dropped below zero on Tuesday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Camilla Swindle sits in a shopping cart as she and her boyfriend wait in a long line to enter a grocery store in Austin on Tuesday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Brett Archibad entertains his family as they try to stay warm in their home in Pflugerville, Texas, on Tuesday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Residents clear snow from a sidewalk in Chicago on Tuesday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Customers use light from a cell phone as they shop for meat at a grocery store in Dallas on Tuesday. Even though the store lost power, it was open for cash-only sales.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

A United Airlines jet is de-iced at the George Bush International Airport in Houston.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

A snow plow clears a parking lot in Columbus, Ohio, early on Tuesday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

City worker Kaleb Love works to clear ice from a water fountain in Richardson, Texas, on Tuesday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Steam rises off the frozen Missouri River in Kansas City.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Bethany Fischer washes her face as her husband, Nic, lies on a mattress at a church in Houston on Tuesday. The couple lost power to their home.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Homes in the Westbury neighborhood of Houston are covered in snow on Monday, February 15.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

James Derrick, who is homeless, peeks out of his tent in Oklahoma City on Monday. The city had gone a record five days without climbing over 20 degrees, and it wasn’t expected to top that temperature until Thursday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Motorists take it slow in Indianapolis on Monday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

A city employee clears sidewalks in South Bend, Indiana, on Monday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Austin, Texas, is blanketed in snow on Monday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Eithan Colindres wears a winter coat inside after his family’s apartment lost power in Houston on Monday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Two women cross Main Street as snow falls in Bowling Green, Ohio, on Monday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

A boy feeds his pigs in St. Joe, Arkansas, on Monday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Ice coats a road sign in Midland, Texas, on Monday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Kirk Caudill shovels snow in Louisville, Kentucky.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Vehicles clear ice at the international airport in Nashville, Tennessee, on Monday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Crews unload snow that they removed from city streets in Oklahoma City.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

People help a stuck motorist in Oklahoma City on Monday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

People walk on a snowy road in Austin on Monday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Men shovel ice and snow in front of shops in Louisville, Kentucky, on Monday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

A few cars drive in San Angelo, Texas, on Sunday, February 14.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

People enter a Covid-19 testing site in Seattle on Saturday, February 13. Seattle reported more than 11 inches of snow over the weekend, its most since January 1972.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Harrison Walsh skis by Seattle’s Pike Place Market on Saturday.

Winter storms wreaking havoc in the US

Cars drive along Interstate 705 as snow falls in Tacoma, Washington, on Saturday.

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Tesla Stock Falls As Production Of Top-Selling Model 3 Electric Vehicle Halted

Tesla (TSLA) has reportedly halted production of its Model 3 sedan at its Fremont, Calif., factory amid a global chip shortage that’s hitting the auto industry. Tesla stock fell.




X



Staff of the Model 3 production line were told their line would be idle from Feb. 22 to March 7, sources told Bloomberg News.

Tesla would pay staff for Feb. 22 and Feb. 23 but not for Feb. 28, March 1, 2 and 3. Instead, they were advised to take vacation time, if possible.

The report did not specify the reason Tesla paused operations, but the ongoing global chip shortage may have been one reason. The winter storm in Texas last week that shut down the Samsung factory in Austin could have impacted chip supply further.

While it is unclear if Samsung currently supplies Tesla with chips, it has been a customer in the past. And the two announced last January a partnership to produce a new 5-nanometer chip for full self-driving, according to Electrek.

Wedbush analyst Daniel Ives said the shutdown is “more around chip shortages (and not demand driven), which continues to plague GM and other automakers in the near-term.”

He added that based on his analysis, there is still some supply of Model 3s from Q4 in the Fremont lot and he is “not overly concerned this supply chain/factory disruption changes the overall delivery trajectory for Q1 and 2021.”

It’s not known how much production will be lost due to the temporary closure. The Fremont factory has a capacity to make 600,000 vehicles a year. Tesla, which delivered almost 500,000 vehicles worldwide last year, said it expects to increase deliveries by more than 50% this year.

In 2020, Tesla closed the Fremont factory for the holidays, from Dec. 24 to Jan. 11. At the time, Tesla offered a full week of pay, along with a few paid holidays. Employees were also asked to take five days off unpaid unless they opted for and found work in other areas of the factory.

Tesla also produces Model 3s at its China plant, but the Fremont plant has the biggest capacity.


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Tesla Stock

Shares were down 6.6% at 693.08, on the stock market today. IBD Leaderboard stock Tesla is firmly below its 50-day moving average after giving up the 800 level, according to MarketSmith chart analysis. With two sell signals triggered, investors should consider taking some profits.

Tesla stock has seen its relative strength line slope downward in recent weeks. Its RS Rating is sill a solid 96 out of a possible 99, while its EPS Rating is 76.

Tesla is not the only automaker closing shop recently to deal with chip shortages. General Motors extended shutdowns at three assembly plants from a week in early February to more than a month through mid-March. 

In January, Ford shut down a Louisville, Ky., plant due to chip shortages. The company said at the time that the closure was temporary but that the problem would be an ongoing one for months to come.

Other U.S. automakers making a big push into EVs General Motors (GM) fell 3.3% and Ford (F) was down 3%.


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Tesla Cuts Prices

Meanwhile, Tesla also appeared to stop taking orders for the cheapest version of the Model Y Standard Range sport utility vehicle earlier this week. The SUV disappeared from the Tesla website just over a month after its launch and barely a week after a price cut. CEO Elon Musk later clarified that the vehicle is available off menu on special order.

Last week, Tesla slashed the base model Model Y by $2,000 to $39,990. Tesla raised the price of its Performance models by $1,000, including the Model Y, which rose to $60,990. Tesla’s website on Monday also showed a $1,000 price cut for the Model 3 and Y Long Range Dual Motor AWD. The Model Y LR now goes for $48,990, and the Model 3 LR costs $45,990.

Some observers have said the price cuts are a sign that increased competition is cutting into Tesla’s market share. Wedbush’s Ives says he never viewed this Model Y version as moving the needle for Tesla. 

“Continued price cuts has been part of the overall Tesla strategy over the past year and we do not expect that to change,” he said. Ives added that as Detroit stalwarts GM and Ford, among others, have gone all-in on EVs over the past month, the $5 trillion EV market over the next decade “will have many winners around the globe.”

Please follow Adelia Cellini Linecker on Twitter @IBD_Adelia.

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USPS picks a new mail truck—and no, they won’t all be electric

The United States Postal Service has decided on a new delivery vehicle. On Tuesday afternoon, the USPS awarded a 10-year, $485-million contract to Oshkosh Defense—better known for armored vehicles—to deliver between 50,000 and 165,000 Next Generation Delivery Vehicles, with the first trucks due on the road in 2023.

Neither the USPS nor Oshkosh is ready to share in-depth specs for the NGDV; Oshkosh still has to finalize the design, according to the press release. We do know that the new fleet will be made of a mix of powertrains. Some will be battery electric, but others will use “fuel-efficient internal combustion engines,” with the ability to be retrofitted “to keep pace with advances in electric vehicle technology.”

The rendered images certainly show a uniquely styled vehicle. The combination of an extremely low hood and very tall windshield gives it more than a little resemblance to a Pixar creation, but the payoff for this anatine look should be excellent forward visibility. Luckily for future postal workers, air conditioning is standard-issue, so they shouldn’t get too hot due to that expanse of glass trapping the Sun’s heat.

More attention appears to have been paid to driver and pedestrian safety than with the USPS’ current fire-prone Grumman LLV trucks. There are airbags, as well as a camera- and sensor-enabled suite of driver assists like automatic emergency braking.

Many had hoped that the USPS was going to choose an all-electric design for its next truck, particularly since President Joe Biden just vowed to electrify the federal government’s vehicle fleet.

Listing image by USPS

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Texas electric bill spike: Greg Abbott pledges relief

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Gov. Greg Abbott said he and other state leaders are working fast to find solutions for home owners and renters facing steep electricity bills after a winter storm left many Texans without power for days.

After Abbott convened what his office described as an “emergency meeting” Saturday with lawmakers to discuss the issue, the Public Utility Commission on Sunday met to sign two orders, including one that would direct energy providers to temporarily stop disconnecting customers from power or water because they have not paid.

The commission also signed an order to stop companies from sending invoices or bill estimates to customers “until we work through issues of how we are going to financially manage the situation we are in,” commission chair DeAnn Walker said.

“Disconnect for non pays cannot occur on a Sunday and that’s why we’re acting today at this hour is trying to stop any from occurring tomorrow,” Walker said before the three-member commission approved the orders.

Both Abbott and the commission’s meeting come as more Texans are reporting receiving exorbitant electric bills despite not having power during the storm. One Texan, according to The New York Times, received a $16,752 electric bill. Not every resident will see the spikes in their bills.

Abbott, speaking during a news conference Sunday in San Antonio, called the recent spike in energy bills “the top priority for the Texas Legislature right now” and said lawmakers were working on a bipartisan basis to help address the issue.

February Winter Storm 2021

  • When will my water come back? How can I get water in the meantime?



  • Will I get a large energy bill?



  • How can I get updates?



  • I was without power for more than a day. Why are people calling these rolling outages?



    The electricity grid was designed to be in high demand during the summer, when Texans crank their air conditioning at home. But some of the energy sources that power the grid during the summer are offline during the winter. So when Texans stayed home during the storm on Sunday and demanded record amounts of electricity, the state’s power grid could not keep up.

  • Wait, we have our own power grid? Why?



    Note that Texas is not all on this same power grid. El Paso is on another grid, as is the upper Panhandle and a chunk of East Texas.

  • I read online that wind turbines are the reason we lost power. Is that true?



    An official with the Electric Reliability Council of Texas said on February 16 that 16 gigawatts of renewable energy generation, mostly wind generation, were offline. Nearly double that, 30 gigawatts, had been lost from thermal sources, which includes gas, coal and nuclear energy.

    “Texas is a gas state,” said Michael Webber, an energy resources professor at the University of Texas at Austin. “Gas is failing in the most spectacular fashion right now.”

  • How can I stay warm? How can I help others?



Along with Abbott, the heads of the Senate and House — Republicans Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and House Speaker Dade Phelan, respectively — were also part of that Saturday meeting, as were chairs of the budget-writing Senate Finance and House Appropriations committees, among others.

Later this week, House and Senate committees will convene to investigate how outages happened and what roles entities like the Electric Reliability Council of Texas played in those power failures.

“Thursday begins the questioning of the stakeholders involved to find out if anything went wrong, what went wrong, who’s to blame, and more importantly, what solutions moving forward we can do as a state Legislature … to make sure this absolutely never happens again,” said state Rep. Craig Goldman, a Fort Worth Republican who chairs the House Energy Resources Committee, during an NBC-DFW interview that aired Sunday.

Jolie McCullough contributed to this report.

Disclosure: New York Times has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.



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Why some storm-hit Texans are ending up with $5,000 electric bills

Texas residents who endured days without power during last week’s winter storms are facing a new obstacle: Electricity bills over $5,000 for less than a week of energy.

Some customers of the state-owned electric grid are seeing the eye-popping, five-figure power bills because their plans are tied to the wholesale market rate. In the Dallas-Fort Worth area, residents have been hit with $1,000 per day charges for electricity, The Dallas Morning News reported. Residents have taken to social media or other outlets to show $5,000 bills — or more— over a period of about five days.

CPS Energy, the electric utility in San Antonio, said some consumers can expect “exorbitant” bills in the coming weeks, KSAT reported. The utility might try to minimize the hit by spreading the charges over a period of up to 10 years, the news station said. 

Texas Governor Greg Abbott met with local lawmakers Saturday to address the latest crisis. “We are moving quickly to alleviate this problem and will continue to work collaboratively throughout this week on solutions to help Texas families and ensure they do not get stuck with skyrocketing energy bills,” Abbott said in a statement.

Spiking bills won’t hit state residents who had fixed-rate electric plans. The problem for many comes from index or variable rate plans, in which rates to power their home or business change with the price of the wholesale market. In good times, a customer’s bill can be lower — but if the price of electricity skyrockets, so too do bills.

Last Monday, as freezing weather rolled through Texas and the southeastern US, the wholesale price of electricity shot up 10,000%. It went from about $50 per megawatt hour to $9,000 — a system cap, according to data provided by the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, the grid’s operator.  

The price increase came as sources of electricity, like natural-gas plants, went offline in the freezing temperatures. Meantime, the unusually cold weather for a mostly temperate state meant demand for energy went up, as people turned up their heaters to stay warm. 

ERCOT responded with rolling blackouts, it said, so as not to further damage the grid. The blackout, which affected a few million residents at its peak, is among the largest in US history.

President Joe Biden on Saturday declared a major disaster in Texas.

ERCOT did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment about the wholesale electricity price and reports of spiking consumer bills. 

It’s unclear how many Texas residents have variable or index-rate electric plans. Texans are allowed to shop for their power plans in its deregulated retail electricity market.

Griddy, one of the state’s electric companies, provides access to wholesale electricity for a monthly membership. Last week, it urged its nearly 30,000 customers to find a different provider if they couldn’t afford the soaring rates, The Dallas Morning News reported. 

Some state lawmakers think some residents might not understand how their electricity is billed. 

“The state needs to look into whether or not people are signing up for things that they don’t really understand and signing up for things that could ultimately really hurt them,” Houston Democratic Rep. Gene Wu said, according to The Dallas Morning News.

On Sunday, power had been restored across much of Texas, though many people remain without water after pipes froze and burst. Damages from the storm, which left dozens dead, is expected to approach $50 billion, AccuWeather predicted. 

Abbott has called the blackout event “unacceptable” and said he would add the reform of ERCOT as an emergency item for the 2021 legislative session.

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has also launched a task force to investigate the outages in Texas and elsewhere in the US.

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How To Buy an Electric Car

Type Small station wagon

Base price $36,500

Range 259 miles

Recharge time 9.3 hours

The smartly functional shape of the Chevrolet Bolt sticks to the proven formula of small runabouts: tall with lots of glass to make the interior airy, yet reasonably short and narrow to create an easy-to-maneuver package. The Bolt stood apart in having those traits, along with an attractive price, at its 2016 debut, but competitors are catching up quickly. Still, its 200 horsepower makes zipping around town effortless.

Type Small crossover

Base price $42,895

Range 211 to 305 miles

Recharge time 8.5 to 11.4 hours

Ford Motor’s bold entrance to the market of mass-appeal E. V.s piggybacks on the popularity of its much-loved Mustang. The Mach-E, a four-door crossover, trades heavily on the heritage of that venerable Ford, right down to the galloping horse logos and the design. It’s available with either rear-drive or all-wheel drive, and Ford offers a version fitted with a larger battery to allow a range of 305 miles.

Type Small S.U.V.

Base price $37,390 (not available in all states)

Range 258 miles

Recharge time 9.6 hours

Hyundai’s approach differs from previous entries in that its Kona and Ioniq E. V.s are also available with gasoline power. Usually, automakers build a unique electric-only structure, but Hyundai has been successful with this method. The Kona Electric’s regenerative braking system, which recharges the battery when slowing down, is calibrated to allow what is known as one-pedal driving, where the driver can also release the accelerator to slow the car instead of using the brake, unlike some models.

Type Midsize car (not available in all states)

Base price $33,245

Range 170 miles

Recharge time 6.1 hours

Like the Kona, the Ioniq shares its body with siblings that have gasoline engines. The Ionic Electric, as a result, is nearly indistinguishable from those cars, aside from its blanked-off grille area. The benefits of the shared architecture include an attractive price.

Type Subcompact car

Base price $29,900

Range 110 miles

Recharge time 4 hours

BMW’s Mini brand has dabbled in electric power in recent years, and its latest effort reflects both the brand’s engaging driving dynamics and the limitations imposed by the car’s small size. With its range, the Mini is not ideal for drivers who regularly make long trips. But with 181 horsepower and a weight of about 3,100 pounds, it’s lively on the road.

Type Midsize car

Base price $31,620

Range 149 to 226 miles

Recharge time 8 to 11 hours

As a global best seller, the Leaf has done much to expose drivers to E.V.s. Its conservative specifications and timid styling pushed it out of the limelight, but a redesign for 2018 brought it back to mainstream relevance.

Type Midsize car

Base price $59,900

Range 233 miles

Recharge time 8 hours

Polestar is the brand that answers the question of “Why didn’t Volvo make an electric car until recently?” Polestar and Volvo are owned by the Chinese automaker Geely, and Polestar’s first fully electric model, the Polestar 2, is a four-door competitor to the likes of the Tesla Model 3. With 402 horsepower on a sport-tuned chassis, it lives up to the Polestar aspiration as a performance brand.

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Frozen pipes, electric woes remain as cold snap eases grip

DALLAS (AP) — Higher temperatures spread across the southern United States on Saturday, bringing relief to a winter-weary region that faces a challenging clean-up and expensive repairs from days of extreme cold and widespread power outages.

In hard-hit Texas, where millions were warned to boil tap water before drinking it, the warm-up was expected to last for several days. The thaw produced burst pipes throughout the region, adding to the list of woes from severe conditions that were blamed for more than 70 deaths.

By Saturday afternoon, the sun had come out in Dallas and temperatures were nearing the 50s. People emerged to walk and jog in residential neighborhoods after days indoors. Many roads had dried out, and patches of snow were melting. Snowmen slumped.

Linda Nguyen woke up in a Dallas hotel room Saturday morning with an assurance she hadn’t had in nearly a week: She and her cat had somewhere to sleep with power and water.

Electricity had been restored to her apartment on Wednesday. But when Nguyen arrived home from work the next evening, she found a soaked carpet. A pipe had burst in her bedroom.

“It’s essentially unlivable,” said Nguyen, 27, who works in real estate. “Everything is completely ruined.”

Deaths attributed to the weather include a man at an Abilene health care facility where the lack of water pressure made medical treatment impossible. Officials also reported deaths from hypothermia, including homeless people and those inside buildings with no power or heat. Others died in car accidents on icy roads or from suspected carbon monoxide poisoning.

Roughly half the deaths reported so far occurred in Texas, with multiple fatalities also in Tennessee, Kentucky, Oregon and a few other Southern and Midwestern states.

A Tennessee farmer died trying to save two calves from a frozen pond.

President Joe Biden’s office said Saturday he has declared a major disaster in Texas, directing federal agencies to help in the recovery.

U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a New York Democrat, tweeted Saturday that she helped raise more than $3 million toward relief. She was soliciting help for a Houston food bank, one of 12 Texas organizations she said would benefit from the donations.

The storms left more than 300,000 still without power across the country on Saturday, many of them in Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi.

More than 50,000 Oregon electricity customers were among those without power, more than a week after an ice storm ravaged the electrical grid. Portland General Electric had hoped to have service back to all but 15,000 customers by Friday night. But the utility discovered additional damage in previously inaccessible areas.

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown ordered the National Guard to go door-to-door in some areas to check on residents’ welfare. At its peak, what was the worst ice storm in 40 years knocked out power to more than 350,000 customers.

In West Virginia, Appalachian Power was working on a list of about 1,500 places that needed repair, as about 44,000 customers in the state remained without electricity after experiencing back-to-back ice storms Feb. 11 and Feb. 15. More than 3,200 workers were attempting to get power back online, their efforts spread across the six most affected counties on Saturday.

In Wayne County, West Virginia, workers had to replace the same pole three times because trees kept falling on it.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott met Saturday with legislators from both parties to discuss energy prices as Texans face massive spikes in their electric bills after wholesale energy prices skyrocketed while power plants were offline.

“We have a responsibility to protect Texans from spikes in their energy bills” resulting from the weather, he said in a statement.

Water woes added misery for people across the South who went without heat or electricity for days after the ice. Snow storms forced rolling blackouts from Minnesota to Texas.

Robert Tuskey was retrieving tools from the back of his pickup truck Saturday afternoon as he prepared to fix a water line at a friend’s home in Dallas.

“Everything’s been freezing,” Tuskey said. “I even had one in my own house … of course I’m lucky I’m a plumber.”

Tuskey, 49, said his plumbing business has had a stream of calls for help from friends and relatives with burst pipes. “I’m fixing to go help out another family member,” he said. “I know she ain’t got no money at all, but they ain’t got no water at all, and they’re older.”

In Jackson, Mississippi, most of the city of about 161,000 lacked running water, and officials blamed city water mains that are more than 100 years old and not built for freezing weather.

The city was providing water for flushing toilets and drinking. But residents had to pick it up, leaving the elderly and those living on icy roads vulnerable.

Incoming and outgoing passenger flights at Memphis International Airport resumed Saturday after all flights were canceled Friday because of water pressure problems. The issues hadn’t been resolved, but airport officials set up temporary restroom facilities.

Prison rights advocates said some correctional facilities across Louisiana had intermittent electricity and frozen pipes, affecting toilets and showers.

The men who are sick, elderly or being held not in dormitories but in cell blocks — small spaces surrounded by concrete walls — were especially vulnerable, according to Voice of the Experienced, a grassroots organization founded and run by formerly incarcerated people. The group said one man at Elayn Hunt Correctional Center, just south of Baton Rouge, described a thin layer of ice on his walls.

Cammie Maturin said she spoke to men at the 6,300-inmate Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola who were given no extra provisions to protect themselves from the cold.

“They give them no extra blankets. No extra anything. For them, it’s just been fend for yourself,” said Maturin, president of the nonprofit H.O.P.E. Foundation.

In many areas, water pressure dropped after lines froze and because people left faucets dripping to prevent pipes from icing, authorities said.

As of Saturday, 1,445 public water systems in Texas had reported disrupted operations, said Toby Baker executive director of the state Commission on Environmental Quality. Government agencies were using mobile labs and coordinating to speed water testing.

That’s up from 1,300 reporting issues Friday afternoon. But Baker said the number of affected customers had dropped slightly. Most were under boil-water orders, with 156,000 lacking water service entirely.

“It seems like last night we may have seen some stabilization in the water systems across the state,” Baker said.

The Saturday thaw after 11 days of freezing temperatures in Oklahoma City left residents with burst water pipes, inoperable wells and furnaces knocked out of operation by brief power blackouts.

Rhodes College in Memphis said Friday that about 700 residential students were being moved to hotels in the suburbs of Germantown and Collierville after school bathrooms stopped functioning because of low water pressure.

Firefighters extinguished a blaze at a fully occupied 102-room hotel in Killeen, Texas, about 70 miles (110 kilometers) north of Austin, late Friday. The hotel’s sprinkler system didn’t work because of frozen pipes, authorities said Saturday.

Flames shot from the top of the four-story hotel, and three people required medical care. Displaced guests were taken to a nearby Baptist church.

Texas electrical grid operators said electricity transmission returned to normal after the historic snowfall and single-digit temperatures created a surge in demand that buckled the state’s system.

Smaller outages remained, but Bill Magness, president of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, said the grid now can provide power throughout the system.

Abbott ordered an investigation into the failure for a state known as the U.S. energy capital. ERCOT officials have defended their preparations and the decision to begin forced outages Monday as the grid reached breaking point.

The blackouts resulted in at least two lawsuits filed against ERCOT and utilities, including one filed by the family of an 11-year-old boy who is believed to have died from hypothermia. The lawsuits claim ERCOT ignored repeated warnings of weaknesses in the state’s power infrastructure.

Also, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton issued civil investigative demands to ERCOT and electric utility companies. His investigation will address power outages, emergency plans, energy pricing and more related to the winter storm.

___

Scolforo reported from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

___

Associated Press journalists Gillian Flaccus in Portland, Oregon; Ellen Knickmeyer in Oklahoma City; Jim Mustian in New York; Terry Wallace in Dallas; Jonathan J. Cooper in Phoenix; and Kimberlee Kruesi in Boise, Idaho contributed.

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Why some Texans are facing catastrophic electric bills after a winter storm

In Texas this week, freezing temperatures overwhelmed the state’s power grid, triggering rolling blackouts, multi-day power outages — and, catastrophic electric bills.

According to the Dallas Morning News, some Texans have been hit with power bills totaling as much as $17,000 for only a few days of electricity, many times more than the usual cost of power in Texas.

Specifically, it’s Texas residents who rely on a wholesale power plan, rather than a fixed-rate plan, who have seen their bills climb after the demand for power jumped dramatically across the state this week as Winter Storm Uri struck and temperatures plunged. Texas, which has a deregulated electricity market, has a number of providers, both wholesale and fixed rate.

Fixed-rate customers pay an agreed-upon rate for their power, but wholesale buyers pay a variable rate; whatever the current price per kilowatt-hour of electricity is. Wholesale power plans, such as those offered by Texas energy company Griddy, can be attractive because during good weather, a customer on a variable plan will pay less than one on a fixed-rate plan, according to Public Utility Commission of Texas spokesperson Andrew Barlow.

The problem is, weather isn’t always good — in Dallas on Tuesday, the low temperature was 4 degrees Fahrenheit, colder than in Anchorage, Alaska.

That freezing weather led to rolling blackouts throughout the state amid an increased demand for power; in turn, that demand caused prices to spike, with wholesale rates soaring to about $8,800 per megawatt-hour in the Dallas area on Wednesday.

According to Reuters, the wholesale rate before this week’s storm was only about $50 per megawatt-hour. On Wednesday, Texas’s Public Utility Commission moved to cap wholesale prices at $9,000 per megawatt-hour, or $9 per kilowatt-hour.

Griddy, the wholesale power company that has faced the most rancor from customers online, warned customers on Monday that their rates could climb precipitously with the onset of cold weather — but those warnings didn’t come in time for many Texans to change to a new service provider, the Dallas Morning News reported Friday, and people were still caught off guard by their power bills.

“$5,000 for five days is outrageous,” Dallas resident DeAndré Upshaw told Morning News reporter Maria Halkias Friday. “No one could have anticipated this except the people who manage the service and the power grid.”

The winter storm was not the first time wholesale customers in Texas have been stuck with large bills due to unexpected weather; in 2019, a heat wave caused a spike in power usage — and a sudden increase in wholesale prices — that left many Texans paying hundreds of dollars more than they expected for power. But for some Texans, the current situation is worse by several orders of magnitude, and comes at a difficult time economically, with the US in the midst of a pandemic-related recession.

According to The Verge, “4.8 million Americans were unable to pay at least one energy bill last year and received a disconnection notice from their utility company.” Texas’s supersized wholesale power bills are sure to make that problem more acute in the aftermath of the storm.

As Texas struggles to recover from the winter storm — President Joe Biden approved a major disaster declaration for the state on Saturday — it’s unclear what comes next for Texans who got stuck with astronomic energy bills.

In a Friday statement, however, Griddy said that it was “seeking customer relief” from the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), which manages most of the state’s power grid, and from the state’s Public Utility Commission.

“Griddy is continuing these efforts and is committed to crediting customers for any relief received, dollar-for-dollar,” the company said. Failing that relief, customers could be on the hook for thousands of dollars worth of bills.

Gigantic electric bills are just part of Texas’s power problem this week

Texas has been in unique difficulty this week in part because of the state’s unique power system: Unlike the rest of the lower 48, most of the Lone Star State relies on ERCOT’s independent, internal power grid, which provides about 90 percent of the state’s electricity.

As Vox’s Umair Irfan explained earlier this week, it’s been a hard week for that grid, even though Texas is “the largest oil, natural gas, and wind energy producer” in the country. Demand has far exceeded supply, which is what led to rolling blackouts and dramatically higher prices.

According to Irfan:

The sudden cold snap this weekend put the state’s ample resources to the test, with demand reaching a record high peak for the winter, more than 69,000 megawatts. That’s 3,200 MW higher than the previous record set in 2018.

As demand reached new heights, the supply of electricity fell drastically in the past few days, far below what operators expected. Ordinarily, ERCOT plans for winter to be much warmer and anticipates a lower energy demand. Power providers often schedule downtime and maintenance during the winter months to prepare for the massive annual surge in electricity demand in the hot Texas summer. The state’s ample wind and solar energy resources are also diminished in the winter, so ERCOT doesn’t depend on them to meet much of the demand they anticipate.

Texas’s power grid was also hobbled by lower-than-usual electricity supply after natural gas pipelines froze in the winter weather, and as energy production dropped off across the board. This put the state in an even worse jam, and also contributed to high power prices.

Texas’s decision to remain on an independent grid dates back more than 80 years, according to NBC, and was intended to keep Texas utilities free of federal regulation. It’s succeeded on that count — but at the cost of not being able to borrow power from other states in a crisis.

“The Texas power grid is really an island,” Rice University professor Daniel Cohan told Vox earlier this week. “Whatever happens in Texas stays in Texas.”

As of Friday, things were getting back to normal with the Texas grid, though the state is still facing water and food shortages. ERCOT ended emergency conditions and returned to normal operation; the number of people without power fell to just about 58,000, as of late Saturday afternoon, rather than millions.

For Griddy customers and other Texans on a wholesale plan, however, the effects of the storm will linger in the form of gigantic power bills.

“I don’t have that type of money,” one Texas resident, Akilah Scott-Amos, told the Daily Beast this week. “I now owe Griddy $2,869.11. This is going to put me in debt, this is going to mess up my credit. Are they going to cut me off? In the middle of this ongoing crisis?”



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Power companies begin forced outages as bitter temperatures push electric infrastructure to the limit

Around midday Monday, area residents began to report that their power was turned off amid brutally cold temperatures. Subzero temperatures and extremely cold wind chills continued Monday, with record lows likely Tuesday morning.Omaha Public Power District President Tim Burke told KETV that forced outages, affecting those served by the Southwest Power Pool, were planned to last about an hour. OPPD, LES, NPPD are all served by the Southwest Power Pool.The Southwest Power Pool reported on Twitter: “After declaring an Energy Emergency Alert Level 3 at 10:08 a.m. this morning, and after exhausting all other options to ensure the continued reliability of the regional grid, SPP is directing member utilities to implement controlled interruptions of service effective immediately.”Officials say this is happening because there is not enough power available to keep up with customer demand and that this type of demand reduction is only used as a last resort to preserve the reliability of the electric grid. Burke said around noon they started outages in Bellevue and the power was returned around 1 p.m. Residents in La Vista reported losing power for about 30 minutes at 1 p.m.This is the first time OPPD has had to resort to this measure. Burke asks that customers don’t panic, saying they will “load shed” for an hour at a time in different parts of the customer area. This won’t affect hospitals, jails, other critical industries. He said officials will not be able to give a warning to customers to let them know if their power will be affected. Officials called the event “unprecedented.””It’s a last resort that we understand puts a burden on our member utilities and the customers they serve, but it’s a step we’re consciously taking to prevent circumstances from getting worse, which could result in uncontrolled outages of even greater magnitude,” chief operating officer Lanny Nickell said. Burke said a big part of the problem is a lack of wind, which is affecting supply.The Omaha Public Power District asked customers Sunday to add blankets and lower the thermostat as subzero temperatures push electrical infrastructure to the limit across much of the Central United States.“These prolonged, frigid temperatures are increasing demand for energy across our service territory and for our partner utilities,” said Tim Burke, president and CEO of OPPD in a news release. OPPD is part of the Southwest Power Pool, which asked all members to begin energy conservation at 11:59 p.m. Sunday. SPP declared an Energy Emergency Alert to balance the high demand for electricity.OPPD said customers can help by lowering the thermostat, and dressing more warmly in the house. Customers should also make sure the fireplace damper is closed when not in use.A release from the utility offered options for those looking to help:What should I do?If you are healthy enough to do so, turn down your thermostat by 3 degrees. (Note: Older adults may want to raise the thermostat to prevent hypothermia).To help stay warm, wear a sweater or other layers of clothing.Close the fireplace damper when not in use to avoid losing heat through the chimney.Leave curtains, blinds and/or shades open in direct sunlight to warm the room and close them at night to prevent heat loss through the windows.To avoid frozen pipes, allow heat to circulate around meters and pipes located near outside walls, in uninsulated cabinets or other enclosed areas.Where previous freeze-ups have been a problem, a slight trickle of water from the faucet may keep a pipe from freezing.PROTECT YOURSELF DURING A POWER OUTAGE:Keep freezers and refrigerators closed.Have phones charged and batteries available.Use a generator, but ONLY outdoors and away from windows.Do not use a gas stove and ovens to heat your home.Disconnect appliances and electronics to avoid damage from electrical surges.Have alternate plans for refrigerating medicines or using power-dependent medical devices.If safe, go to an alternate location for heat or cooling. Be a good neighbor. Check on the welfare of others.Read more here

Around midday Monday, area residents began to report that their power was turned off amid brutally cold temperatures.

Subzero temperatures and extremely cold wind chills continued Monday, with record lows likely Tuesday morning.

Omaha Public Power District President Tim Burke told KETV that forced outages, affecting those served by the Southwest Power Pool, were planned to last about an hour. OPPD, LES, NPPD are all served by the Southwest Power Pool.

The Southwest Power Pool reported on Twitter: “After declaring an Energy Emergency Alert Level 3 at 10:08 a.m. this morning, and after exhausting all other options to ensure the continued reliability of the regional grid, SPP is directing member utilities to implement controlled interruptions of service effective immediately.”

Officials say this is happening because there is not enough power available to keep up with customer demand and that this type of demand reduction is only used as a last resort to preserve the reliability of the electric grid.

Burke said around noon they started outages in Bellevue and the power was returned around 1 p.m. Residents in La Vista reported losing power for about 30 minutes at 1 p.m.

This is the first time OPPD has had to resort to this measure. Burke asks that customers don’t panic, saying they will “load shed” for an hour at a time in different parts of the customer area. This won’t affect hospitals, jails, other critical industries.

He said officials will not be able to give a warning to customers to let them know if their power will be affected.

Officials called the event “unprecedented.”

“It’s a last resort that we understand puts a burden on our member utilities and the customers they serve, but it’s a step we’re consciously taking to prevent circumstances from getting worse, which could result in uncontrolled outages of even greater magnitude,” chief operating officer Lanny Nickell said.

Burke said a big part of the problem is a lack of wind, which is affecting supply.

The Omaha Public Power District asked customers Sunday to add blankets and lower the thermostat as subzero temperatures push electrical infrastructure to the limit across much of the Central United States.

“These prolonged, frigid temperatures are increasing demand for energy across our service territory and for our partner utilities,” said Tim Burke, president and CEO of OPPD in a news release.

OPPD is part of the Southwest Power Pool, which asked all members to begin energy conservation at 11:59 p.m. Sunday. SPP declared an Energy Emergency Alert to balance the high demand for electricity.

OPPD said customers can help by lowering the thermostat, and dressing more warmly in the house. Customers should also make sure the fireplace damper is closed when not in use.

    A release from the utility offered options for those looking to help:
    What should I do?
    • If you are healthy enough to do so, turn down your thermostat by 3 degrees. (Note: Older adults may want to raise the thermostat to prevent hypothermia).
    • To help stay warm, wear a sweater or other layers of clothing.
    • Close the fireplace damper when not in use to avoid losing heat through the chimney.
    • Leave curtains, blinds and/or shades open in direct sunlight to warm the room and close them at night to prevent heat loss through the windows.
    • To avoid frozen pipes, allow heat to circulate around meters and pipes located near outside walls, in uninsulated cabinets or other enclosed areas.
    • Where previous freeze-ups have been a problem, a slight trickle of water from the faucet may keep a pipe from freezing.

PROTECT YOURSELF DURING A POWER OUTAGE:

  • Keep freezers and refrigerators closed.
  • Have phones charged and batteries available.
  • Use a generator, but ONLY outdoors and away from windows.
  • Do not use a gas stove and ovens to heat your home.
  • Disconnect appliances and electronics to avoid damage from electrical surges.
  • Have alternate plans for refrigerating medicines or using power-dependent medical devices.
  • If safe, go to an alternate location for heat or cooling.
  • Be a good neighbor. Check on the welfare of others.

Read more here



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