As tornado-like winds thrash Houston, more than 860,000 lose power




A severe thunderstorm with high windsand at least one potential tornado spotted Thursday evening has left in its wake more than 800,000 Harris County residents without power, plus thousands more in the dark across the Houston region.

Data collected by PowerOutage.us showed that as of 7:45 p.m., nearly 40 percent of Harris County's almost 2 million customers were experiencing a power outage after Thursday's storm. At the same time, CenterPoint Energy reported that more than 860,000 of its customers were without power. The high winds affected multiple events, including the Houston ISD budget meeting planned for Thursday evening.

The storm, accompanied by winds of more than 80 mph, tracked into Houston from the west, and as a result, PowerOutage.us reported almost 75 percent of Waller County customers lost power. After the storm ravaged the Houston area, residents in East Texas' Hardin County, north of Beaumont, were hit hard, as more than 40 percent were found without power as of 7:30 p.m.

According to CenterPoint Energy's Outage Tracker, 100 percent of residents in 77493 zip code, which includes parts of Katy, were without power as of 7:45 p.m. Similarly, nearly the entirety of CenterPoint's service area in Crosby and Baytown, east of Houston, lost power.

The winds were so strong Thursday that they destroyed property at downtown Houston high-rises as the storm rolled through the neighborhood. KHOU reporter Jason Miles posted on X a video showing blown-out windows at the CenterPoint EnergyPlaza and Total Energies towers.

The National Weather Service issued tornado warnings for Hockley, Satsuma, Addicks until 6:30 p.m. Thursday, then for Houston, Bellaire and West University Place through 6:45 p.m. as the storm continued east, the NWS issued a tornado warning for Pasadena and Baytown through 7 p.m.

On X, Lauren Przybyl, who anchors Good Day on FOX4 in Dallas-Fort Worth, reported that she observed a tornado forming in Cypress, but no tornado have been confirmed by National Weather Service Houston.
 
The climate has changed countless times in the past, it's changing now, and it'll go on changing until billions of years in the future when the sun expands and eventually eats what's left of earth. The climate is not and never has been a static system. Even periods of seeming stability... weren't. Even Snowball Earth would have had fluctuations in the weather, even if it was just more/less snow at any one point. The more we learn about the complexities of long term weather conditions, the more we realise that we don't know shit. Chaos Theory famously postulates the Butterfly Effect, suggesting that even something as dynamic as a tornado can be influenced by a butterfly flapping its wings... and while this may indeed be an exaggeration, it's not all that big of one.

The issue isn't climate change, it's whether man made caused global warming is fueling an abnormally severe and unpredictable degree of climate change, leading to extreme weather events becoming much more common. That, I am not getting into.
>butterfly effect
You are correct but in this case it’s the warm water in the Pacific Ocean that is causing it. We are currently in a 3-5 year El Niño cycle that is sending warm, moist air to north and South America. (El nino = the little boy = Jesus Christ) It’s named this because the warm water is most noticeable in December. (Also because god controls the weather, not man, imho)
 
>butterfly effect
You are correct but in this case it’s the warm water in the Pacific Ocean that is causing it. We are currently in a 3-5 year El Niño cycle that is sending warm, moist air to north and South America. (El nino = the little boy = Jesus Christ) It’s named this because the warm water is most noticeable in December. (Also because god controls the weather, not man, imho)

You can literally trace changes in the climate to when Medieval peasants cut down all of the trees in Europe and China.

Regardless, the logical extreme of this is that we have absolutely impact on the planet is just silly. Hell, we literally fixed that ozone thing in like 10 years.
 
Outside of the fact I hate the "hurr durr southerners don't know shit about tornadoes or the cold" shit (having moved north and found out northerners/midwesterners are just as retarded as southerners), it's hard to really say this sort of shit is surprising when its some weather phenomenon that's abnormal for the area.

Pretty much nowhere I lived in the south had any sort of tornado response, as it simply wasn't worth investing in over other more common risks. And if you were expecting storms, it was like a hurricane, where you know a week in advance it's gonna show up.
We also don't have any basements down here, because of the water table, the floods, etc. Tornados just aren't a regular thing, and hurricanes in the gulf were a rarity.

Yankees don't know shit about the heat, but we don't laugh at them. We know the heat sucks, and we sympathize.
 
>butterfly effect
You are correct but in this case it’s the warm water in the Pacific Ocean that is causing it. We are currently in a 3-5 year El Niño cycle that is sending warm, moist air to north and South America. (El nino = the little boy = Jesus Christ) It’s named this because the warm water is most noticeable in December. (Also because god controls the weather, not man, imho)
El Nino is a thing that affects multiple continents, trust me on this. Every year in my country there's a massive amount of resources devoted to determining the potential status of El Nino or his sister, as those patterns strongly influence whether we burn, flood, or eat. ENSO is our god.
 
Another reminder that this story was only picked up nationally by msn because Libs need to continue the guise that the Texas grid system is very unreliable and force Texas to get on the National grid system.

Here is the original Chron link
Notice who wrote it? Timothy Malcolm. The Chron lists him as "Deputy Managing Editor of Texas Culture. He's a longtime journalist and author of two books."
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If you look at his Chron page then you will notice he wrote only 2 articles about bad weather/power grid failure (the same event), and the rest is food and drinks. Now the page lists his X account but it leads to a dead account. Could be he left once Elon took over.

Now why would a foodie writer be writing about the power outage due to horrible weather????? Could it be he has an agenda that aligns with why msn picked up the story????
 
Why is it the Texas grid AGAIN? AGAIN and AGAIN.
Seriously, how corrupted the inept the officials are? Who are they going to blame this time?

People in Texas really should be holding these "public servants" accountable, a good 2A, well-regulated style.

Edit: taking my L, just another freak nature incident.
 
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Why is it the Texas grid AGAIN? AGAIN and AGAIN.
Seriously, how corrupted the inept the officials are? Who are they going to blame this time?

People in Texas really should be holding these "public servants" accountable, a good 2A, well-regulated style.
The grid is shit because some fucking retard thought it would be a good idea to make like 20% of it be from wind turbines.
 
Another reminder that this story was only picked up nationally by msn because Libs need to continue the guise that the Texas grid system is very unreliable and force Texas to get on the National grid system.
Why is it the Texas grid AGAIN? AGAIN and AGAIN.
Seriously, how corrupted the inept the officials are? Who are they going to blame this time?

People in Texas really should be holding these "public servants" accountable, a good 2A, well-regulated style.
I love how insanely quick this was proven lol.

No above ground power lines are designed to survive 100 mph shrapnel.
They can’t practically bury most power lines in Houston, because the water table is so high and the city was built on a marsh.
 
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Now the AP has picked up on the story: The Authors according to AP:
Baumann reported from Bellingham, Washington, and Weber from Los Angeles. Associated Press reporters Sarah Brumfield in Silver City, Maryland, and Kathy McCormack in Concord, New Hampshire, contributed to this story.
Of course they had to put this down near the bottom of the story which most people would miss:
National Weather Service meteorologist Jeff Evans said the agency had not yet confirmed any tornadoes touching down in and around Houston and Harris County.

“The majority of this damage is straight line winds,” which he said could have reached up to 100 mph (160 kph).

And the idiots from X :

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power grid idiots 3.png

someone who lives in H-Town.png
 
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