For example, The Railroad Commission regulates oil and gas production, but not railroads, while insane is not the word I would use, some things about Texas are extra quirky.
The utility (electricity) rates during part of the crisis are rational if eye watering.
The price going up during power shortages, even to that level, is reasonable. Making people pay that rate without warning them they're about to do the equivalent of running their oven on champagne is what's nonsensical bordering on evil. Even without the use of smart meters or some alert system, a page on their signup paperwork that says "Energy prices may increase drastically during overload conditions. Please indicate the maximum rate you are willing to pay" with a few checkboxes at 2x, 5x, 10x, 25x, 100x, etc would be fine.
+1 You just need a circuit breaker here. It's a classic case of resource exhaustion. At some point your system's production is just too far from its consumption and the queue will not drain.
Spare the people their money and protect your own service. Win win.
Are there any smart metres which can do this? I'm not familiar with Texas, but every place I lived at was basically always connected and the gas/electricity would have to be turned off manually. I know pre-paid metres exist, but that's slightly different.
I'm not sure any consumers ended up paying those rates in the end.
That said, the pay-go market rate plans do make (it's in the electricity facts statement) it abundantly clear that you'll pay more, potentially a lot more, during extraordinary times.
I think the word "corrupt" would be a better choice than "quirky" in this instance. The kind of corruption that occurs in capitalist, communist, and mixed markets alike because of the the commonality that they are run by humans.
Any time someone comments on Texas or California you can be assured state based nationalism will show it's ass. I live in California and was raised in Texas. I love both states and am extra tired of people's edgy comments about either.
I live in California and am an enthusiastic proponent of dissolving the states entirely, devolving their powers to the municipal level. I have no loyalty to any state, they are the middle management of government.