this post was submitted on 18 Feb 2026
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We've been spared any serious natural disasters affecting the grid during that time. No major hurricanes. No big freeze.
The worst event was the 2024 derecho, and that definitely knocked out power here and there. But it was high enough above the treeline to really wreck infrastructure at the ground level.
I'll note that a huge increase in wind and solar capacity means we aren't exposed to the same kind of economic pressure from five years ago, either. The '21 freeze came, in large part, due to gas power plants locking up when they were needed, because they hadn't been weatherized. With less acute demand issues (thanks to new green energy) we haven't been in a position where gas plants could casually wait for prices to spike before turning on.
Huh? There was a big freeze like a month ago in the east.
And the event led to over 100,000 power outages in the region, most of which came back in a day or two. But that paled beside '21, which took out multiple major metro areas statewide.