Hundreds of thousands are still without power in the Houston area. Here's how it happened (2024)

DALLAS – Hundreds of thousands of people in the Houston area likely won’t have power restored until next week, as the city swelters in the aftermath of Hurricane Beryl.

The storm slammed into Texas on Monday, knocking out power to nearly 2.7 million homes and businesses and leaving huge swaths of the region in the dark and without air conditioning in the searing summer heat.

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Although repairs have restored power to nearly 1.4 million customers, the scale of the damage and slow pace of recovery has put CenterPoint Energy, which provides electricity to the nation's fourth-largest city, under mounting scrutiny over whether it was sufficiently prepared for the storm and is doing enough now to make things right.

Some frustrated residents have also questioned why a part of the country that is all too familiar with major storms has been hobbled by a Category 1 hurricane, which is the weakest kind. But a storm's wind speed, alone, doesn't determine how dangerous it can be.

Here's what to know:

What damage did Beryl leave behind?

Beryl was no longer a Category 5 behemoth by the time it reached the U.S. before sunrise Monday. It made landfall as a weakened hurricane with sustained winds of 80 mph (128 kpm) after having already torn a deadly path of destruction through parts of Mexico and the Caribbean.

In the Houston area, Beryl toppled transmission lines, uprooted trees and snapped branches that crashed into power lines. By Friday morning, CenterPoint said it had restored power to almost 1.4 million customers. But nearly 900,000 were still without power, and the company predicted that about half a million would still be in the dark by Monday. Most of those customers were expected to be in the areas where Beryl came ashore.

The staggering summer heat along the Texas coast has added to the urgency of restoring power and the city opened cooling centers for residents with air conditioning.

The area got a brief break from temperatures that reached above 90 degrees (above 32.2 Celsius) with a new round of storms Thursday and Friday. But the rain was also expected to hamper crews' efforts to repair power lines.

What's being done to restore power?

CenterPoint Energy has defended its preparation for the storm and said that it had brought in about 12,000 additional workers from outside Houston since landfall to expedite power restoration.

The utility said it would have been unsafe to preposition those workers inside the predicted storm impact area before it made landfall. Since then, workers have had to assess damage to more than 8,600 miles of power lines.

Under sometimes sharp questioning Wednesday from Houston city councilmembers about the utility's handling of the storm, Brad Tutunjian, vice president for regulatory policy for CenterPoint Energy, said it wouldn't have been safe to pre-position outside crews to “ride out” the storm.

He said the extensive damage to trees and power poles has hampered the ability to restore power quickly.

Rural communities in Beryl's path have also struggled to restore power. In coastal Matagorda County, where Beryl made landfall, officials said it may take up to two weeks to get the electricity back on for around 2,500 customers in the hard-hit community of Sargent, where homes were destroyed and badly damaged.

What other storms have hit Houston?

Beryl is just the latest natural disaster to wreak havoc on the power grid in the Houston area. In May, a powerful storm that ripped through the area with high winds left nearly 1 million people without power.

Houston was also hit hard in 2021 when Texas' power grid failed during a deadly winter storm that brought plunging temperatures, snow and ice. Millions of Texans lost power during that storm and were left to ride it out in frigid homes, or flee.

In 2008, Hurricane Ike made landfall on Galveston Island as a Category 2 storm with 110-mph (177-kph) sustained winds, bringing flooding and wind damage to the Houston area. In the aftermath, Houston created a task force to investigate how the power was knocked out for more than 2 million people and took 19 days to restore.

Jason Ryan, executive vice president of CenterPoint, said this week that the company’s infrastructure is “a little ways away” from being able to withstand storms like Beryl.

Following Ike, the company began installing an “intelligent grid” system that would automatically reroute power to unaffected lines during an outage. Ryan said the utility received millions of dollars in federal funding to implement the technology years ago, but that it's still a work in progress as part of a larger 10-year resiliency plan.

Where is Texas' governor?

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick has been the face of the state's response while Gov. Greg Abbott is on an economic development visit to Asia, where he's traveling to Taiwan, South Korea and Japan.

Abbott left Texas on July 5 with a delegation that included other lawmakers, state officials and civic leaders. On Tuesday, Abbott posted on social media that he has remained in contact with emergency management officials and Patrick, who is the acting governor while Abbott is traveling.

Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas was criticized in 2021 for traveling to Cancun while his state suffered through a deadly freeze. This week, Cruz has traveled along the coast visiting hard-hit communities alongside state officials. On Tuesday, Cruz said he was sleeping on a friend’s couch after his own home in Houston lost power.

___

Associated Press/Report for America reporter Nadia Lathan contributed to this report.

Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

Hundreds of thousands are still without power in the Houston area. Here's how it happened (2024)

FAQs

Why did Houston lose power? ›

What caused the outages? In the immediate sense, the reason millions of Southeast Texas residents went days without power is that Hurricane Beryl slammed into the Houston area last week, maintaining Category I strength for most of its passage over the city and doing at least $2.5 billion in damage from its winds alone.

Why are so many people without power in Texas? ›

Texas is the only state to have its own power grid. It doesn't have significant connections to the grids that serve the eastern and western halves of the United States. And it's been the focus of Abbott and the Legislature since the 2021 winter storm pushed it to the brink of total failure.

How does Houston get power? ›

Most of the electricity in Texas is generated by a combination of natural gas steam and wind turbines. A total of 567 generators send electricity to around 12.6 million Texans every day. From there, 85 transmission companies send power, which customers pay as a fee on their electric bill.

When did Texas lose power? ›

2021 Texas power crisis
February 7, before February 16, after Satellite images of Houston before and after the storm. The dark patches in the latter image depict areas left without electricity.
DateFebruary 10–27, 2021 (2 weeks and 3 days)
Deaths246 to 702 (estimate)
Property damage≥ $195 billion (2021 USD)
4 more rows

When did Houston lose power in 2024? ›

Here's How It Happened. July 10, 2024, at 4:45 p.m. Hundreds of thousands of people in the Houston area likely won't have power restored until next week, as the city swelters in the aftermath of Hurricane Beryl.

What is the issue with Texas power? ›

Unfortunately, in 2021, more than half of the overall electricity generation in Texas came from natural gas, while about 30% came from wind and solar power. ERCOT's order eventually exposed a devastating loophole: Natural gas production relies on electricity, and electricity relies on natural gas production.

Why has electricity gone up so much in Texas? ›

Texas weather extremes drive higher electricity prices in summer and winter. Changing Generation Mix. Wind and solar now provide nearly 1/3 of our power. This lower cost electricity generation pushes wholesale prices down, but transmission costs to get the power to population centers could increase delivery fees.

Why is Texas not on the power grid? ›

Texas is the lone state in the contiguous United States with its own power grid. Embracing the go-it-alone spirit of the Lone Star flag, Texas power companies chose to keep their operations within the state's borders largely to avoid federal regulation.

What percentage of Houston lost power during Beryl? ›

Roughly 87% of CenterPoint's 2.6 million customers lost power after Hurricane Beryl tore through the Houston region early July 8. Here's how many customers remained without power in the days that followed.

How long was Houston without power during Ike? ›

It took 10 days to get the power restored to about 75% of those people or 1.6 million people. It then took another week to restore the remaining 546,000 customers. This is a total of 17 days. Hurricane Ike vs Hurricane Beryl = power restoration (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston - All rights reserved.)

Did Hurricane Beryl knock out power to millions of Houston residents? ›

When Hurricane Beryl made landfall in Texas, the Category 1 storm left more than 2 million utility customers without power in the greater Houston area. That was more than a week ago. But thousands still do not have power, and some residents are fed up with the outages.

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