Natural gas customers in Texas get stuck with $3.4 billion cold-snap surcharge

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Meanwhile, many Texans suffered through blackouts and bitter cold, and 210 people died, according to the latest estimate from the Texas Department of State Health Services.

Calls for winterization

In the wake of the storm, many officials have called on utilities and oil and gas companies to winterize their operations. In a law passed in May, the Railroad Commission was given the authority to write regulations for critical gas infrastructure, including winterization. But facilities have to voluntarily submit forms declaring that they’re critical infrastructure, and the regulator says that the law includes a loophole that allows gas producers, for $150, to file for an exemption from winterizing wellheads. (The fee amount is laid out in another Texas law, which lawmakers apparently overlooked.) Winterizing a wellhead, on the other hand, can cost tens of thousands of dollars.

Texans aren’t the only ones whose bills are higher as a result of producers’ and utilities’ unwillingness to winterize their equipment. Utilities around the country were forced to buy natural gas at significantly higher prices when Texas’ markets went haywire as a result of low supply and high demand. Ratepayers as far away as Minnesota will be paying surcharges for years to come after their utilities had to pay $800 million more than expected for natural gas.

“The ineptness and disregard for common-sense utility regulation in Texas makes my blood boil and keeps me up at night,” Katie Sieben, chairwoman of the Minnesota Public Utility Commission, told The Washington Post in April. “It is maddening and outrageous and completely inexcusable that Texas’ lack of sound utility regulation is having this impact on the rest of the country.”