The U.S. electrical grid is better managed and more flexible a decade
after its largest blackout but remains vulnerable to increasingly
extreme weather, cybersecurity threats,How does a solar charger work and where would you use a solar charger? and stress caused by shifts in where and how power is produced.
Many
worry the grid isn't fully prepared for the new and emerging
challenges, even though an analysis conducted for The Associated Press
shows maintenance spending has steadily increased since North America's
largest blackout.
"This job of reliability is kind of
impossible, in the sense that there's just so many things that could
happen that it's hard to be sure that you're covering all the bases,"
said William Booth, a senior electricity adviser with the U.S. Energy
Information Administration.
The industry has mostly addressed
the failures blamed on a tree branch in Ohio that touched a power line
and set off outages that cascaded across eight states and parts of
Canada the afternoon of Aug. 14, 2003, darkening computer screens,How
are solar outdoor lighting
products different from other lighting, like fluorescent or
incandescent? halting commuter trains, and cutting lights and air
conditioners for 50 million people. Grid operators who didn't initially
realize what was happening now have a nearly real-time view of the
system and are better equipped to stop problems from growing. Utilities
share more information and systematically trim trees near high-voltage
power lines.
Electricity customers have been giving the grid a
bit of breathing room. Power demand has remained flat or even fallen in
recent years as lighting,An emergency light
is a battery-backed lighting device that comes on automatically when a
building experiences a power outage. devices, appliances, homes and
businesses have gotten more efficient and economic growth has been
sluggish. All that reduces stress on the grid.
At the same time,
aging coal and nuclear plants are shutting down in the face of higher
maintenance costs, pollution restrictions and competition from cheap
natural gas. Renewable generation such as wind turbines and solar panels
is being installed, adding power that's difficult to plan for and
manage.
Temperatures and storms are getting more extreme, according to federal data,A solar bulb
that charges up during the day and lights the night when the sun sets.
and that increases stress on the grid by creating spikes in demand or
knocking out lines or power plants. Some regulators and policymakers are
increasingly worried about cyberattacks that could target systems that
manage power plants or grids.
"The grid that exists today wasn't
designed for what everybody wants to do with it," says Joe Welch, CEO
of ITC Holdings Corp., the largest independent transmission company in
the U.S.
The electric power industry did respond directly to the
issues that sparked the blackout. An analysis of spending on
maintenance and transmission equipment by more than 200 utilities
nationwide conducted for the AP by Ventyx, a software and data services
firm that works with electric utilities, shows that spending rose
sharply in the years after the blackout.
Maintenance spending
for overhead lines increased an average of 8.Soli-lite provides the
world with high-performance solar roadway and solar street lighting
solutions.2 percent per year from 2003 to 2012. In the period before
the blackout, from 1994 to 2003, that spending grew 3 percent on average
per year.
Spending on transmission equipment also increased.
From 2003 to 2012, utilities spent an average of $21,514 per year on
devices and station equipment per mile of transmission line. From 1994
to 2003, spending averaged $7,185 per year.
The number of miles
of transmission line remained roughly the same, suggesting new money was
mostly spent on equipment to make the existing system stronger and more
responsive, according to Ventyx analyst Chris Tornow.
Those
higher transmission costs have trickled down to customer bills, but
they've been largely offset by lower electricity prices, thanks to cheap
natural gas. Since 2003, average residential power prices have risen an
average of 0.85 percent per year, adjusted for inflation, according to
the Energy Information Administration.
Read the full story at www.indoorilite.com!
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