Chaos in Houston as Hurricane Beryl plunges 2.2 million into darkness. CenterPoint races against time for power restoration.
Houston recently faced a massive power outage crisis as Hurricane Beryl wreaked havoc on the city, plunging 2.2 million residents into darkness. The impact of Beryl's wrath was more severe than previous incidents, with the number of outages doubling the figures from a previous derecho in May which affected over 900,000 people. CenterPoint, the energy provider, revealed that the hurricane severely damaged the electric infrastructure, causing extensive power outages and disrupting normal life in the city. The storm made landfall as a Category 1 hurricane, bringing heavy rainfall, strong winds, and unfortunately, resulting in at least three deaths.
As Houston struggles to recover from the chaos, CenterPoint races against time to restore power to the affected residents. The company aims to have power restored to at least 1 million customers as quickly as possible. Despite facing challenges like 10 downed transmission lines, CenterPoint remains committed to their restoration efforts. The process is expected to be arduous, with CenterPoint emphasizing that customers should prepare for a multi-day wait before full restoration is achieved.
In the midst of the crisis, CenterPoint's updates provide a glimmer of hope for the residents. The company mobilizes resources to assess the damage and kickstart the restoration process, prioritizing the assessment of electric system damages. With over 2.2 million customers facing outages during Beryl's landfall, the scale of the restoration process is monumental but essential for the city's recovery.
Hurricane Beryl's impact serves as a reminder of the unpredictable nature of storms. With more than 1.2 million customers still without power, the city faces a long road to normalcy. Tragically, the storm claimed the life of one individual in Harris County, highlighting the grave consequences of such natural disasters on communities.
The number of outages due to Beryl is more than double the 900000-plus who lost power in May when a derecho unexpectedly hit the area.
Tropical Storm Beryl โmore heavily impactedโ Houston's electric infrastructure than originally anticipated. The Cat 1 hurricane led to widespread power ...
Beryl brought heavy rain and strong winds to the Houston area Monday morning while causing widespread power outages and at least three deaths, according to ...
At least 10 transmission lines are down, according to Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick. CenterPoint Energy update on efforts to restore power. CenterPoint said the initial ...
CenterPoint says they are mobilizing their resources to begin the restoration process with the initial focus on assessing the damage to the electric system and ...
CenterPoint Energy reported a peak outage of 2.2 million customers during Beryl's landfall in southeast Texas.
Beryl expected to bring strong winds and heavy rain as it moves northeast through the state. One person died in Harris County after a tree fell on a house.
"While we tracked the projected path, intensity, and timing for Hurricane Beryl closely for many days, this storm proved the unpredictability of hurricanes as ...
The impact of Hurricane Beryl started Sunday along the Texas coast, with heavy rainfall, storm surge and swells with life-threatening riptides.
More than 2.3 million in Texas are left without power after Beryl made landfall in the state as a Category 1 hurricane Monday morning.
Recovery efforts for Hurricane Beryl are underway after the storm brought damaging winds and heavy rainfall to Southeast Texas Monday.
As of 1 p.m. Tuesday, about 24 hours after the storm finished moving through the area, more than 1.6 million CenterPoint Energy customers were still without ...
Power companies and Texas officials say restoration efforts could take days after Hurricane Beryl knocked out power for nearly 3 million electricity ...