Beyond that, while adding the necessary connections must be done, there is no plan to improve all the municipal grids to handle the bigger loads and be more resilient to weather disruptions. Houston is a great example. More power plants wouldn't get electricity to the customers when all the wires are down. For Houston and many other coastal cities vulnerable to hurricanes, they need to bury the cables, a very expensive, time consuming and labor intensive job. Who is going to finance this build out? What will the cost of power be for the customers? Will they be able to afford to run the A/C essential to being able to live in that environment?
The Blackouts of the Olduvai Hypothesis are already here.
https://www.msn.com/en-ca/weather/topstories/world-power-grids-fail-due-to-abnormal-heat-wave/ar-BB1q0bKb
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-07-15/climate-change-leaves-world-s-electricity-networks-unable-to-cope
RE