Environmental Research: Infrastructure and Sustainability (Jan 2023)

The inequitable distribution of power interruptions during the 2021 Texas winter storm Uri

  • Zeal Shah,
  • Juan Pablo Carvallo,
  • Feng-Chi Hsu,
  • Jay Taneja

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/2634-4505/acd4e7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 2
p. 025011

Abstract

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Climate change induced extreme weather events will increase in intensity and frequency, leading to longer and widespread electricity outages. As an example, Winter Storm Uri in Texas left over 4.5 million customers without power between 14 and 18 February 2021. The social justice consequences of these events remain an outstanding question, as outage data are, typically, only available at the county level, obscuring detailed experiences. We produce a first-of-its-kind unique spatially resolved dataset of interruptions using satellite data on nighttime lights to track blackouts at the census block group (CBG) level. Correlating this dataset with demographic data reveals that minority CBGs were 1.5–3 times more likely to suffer from interruptions compared to predominantly white CBGs, whereas income status was positively correlated with the likelihood of interruption. The presence of critical facilities—including police and fire stations, hospitals, and water treatment facilities—in a CBG reduced the chances of interruptions by around $16\%$ , a small difference that does not otherwise explain the disparity among communities. We suggest explanations, test a subset of them, and propose further work needed to explain what drives these disparities.

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