How much will record cold cost Americans? Billions, according to AccuWeather

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Wednesday, February 17, 2021
Winter storms expected to cost billions
This week's brutal winter storm didn't just leave millions in Texas without power and heat, the record cold is also costing billions.

HOUSTON, Texas -- This week's brutal winter storms didn't just leave millions in Texas without power and heat, the record cold is also costing billions.

AccuWeather estimates that the nation's total economic impact from the coast-to-coast winter storms will be between $45 billion and $50 billion.

The weather is already causing problems at fuel and power facilities along the Gulf Coast, according to AccuWeather.

Natural gas prices rose more than 7% as some of the nation's largest oil refineries shut down to conserve power.

"These oil refineries, of course, take crude oil and transform it into heating oil and gasoline. I have no doubt some of them are going to be shut down, they are going to be frozen, they're going to be out of business, and that is going to have an impact on the price of heating oil and gasoline," said Dr. Joel Myers, founder and CEO of AccuWeather.

Dealing with frigid temperatures and ice is also a nightmare for farmers. The cold could wipe out some of the vegetable crops in southern Texas along the Rio Grande Valley, Myers said.

Dale Murden, the president of Texas Citrus Mutual, said the inside of fruit begins to ice once temperatures dip below 28 degrees Fahrenheit for more than five hours. He said he recorded temperatures as low as 21 degrees at his groves.

"This thing was blowing so hard that whether we were running micro-sprinklers to try to freeze the tree and insolate the inside, or smoke, or whatever, it was almost impossible because of the wind," he said.

The cold arrived in the middle of the grapefruit harvest and the start of the late Valencia orange. Texas is the third largest citrus producer in the nation, according to AccuWeather, and growers are still trying to financially recover from this summer's Hurricane Hanna.