Pointing out the inherent weakness of the wind/gas pairing is not having a one-directional conversation, it's a component of a much larger conversation about properly planning for weather that despite not being normal for Texas, IS for other parts of the country and other parts of the world. One can be discussed while acknowledging that it is a subset of a larger suite of issues. It's an important topic, but so is the rest of that stuff, particularly if one believes that these events will become more frequent in the future. Planning for that becomes important and there are sources currently available that don't have those vulnerabilities.
There were plenty of recommendations for Texas to prepare for poor weather after the 2011 winter.
The parts of Texas that aren't on the Texas grid did a lot better. El Paso is on the western power grid, but they also invested in preparing for colder temperatures.
https://kvia.com/news/el-paso/2021/...outages-like-the-rest-of-texas-and-heres-why/
El Paso Electric said they always try to prepare for the future and after a winter storm in 2011, the utility company worked towards replacing and upgrading their equipment. Many generators now have antifreeze protection.
"We went from plus-10 degrees which was what the original equipment was designed for to a minus-10, so currently everything we install or upgrade is done to a minus-10 degree sustained temperature," said Louie Guarderrama, director of operations for the utility company.