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Extreme weather poses increasing threat to power grid

Utilities weigh needed upgrades, high costs to users

By HOLBROOK MOHR and GARANCE BURKE, Associated Press
Published: December 22, 2015, 6:01am
7 Photos
A concrete pole carrying feeder lines stands outside the Stennis substation for Coast Electric on Nov. 12, which has been built up to a higher elevation, in Kiln, Miss. Utilities across the country are struggling to balance customer costs with the need for improvements to counter the rising number of violent storms, floods and droughts threatening the U.S. power grid's core infrastructure.
A concrete pole carrying feeder lines stands outside the Stennis substation for Coast Electric on Nov. 12, which has been built up to a higher elevation, in Kiln, Miss. Utilities across the country are struggling to balance customer costs with the need for improvements to counter the rising number of violent storms, floods and droughts threatening the U.S. power grid's core infrastructure. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) Photo Gallery

WAVELAND, Miss. — When Hurricane Katrina’s punishing storm surge plowed ashore, it swamped seven of Coast Electric Power Association’s substations, vital to powering thousands of Mississippi homes and businesses. The facilities have long since been repaired, but a decade after the storm they remain at the same elevation, and just as vulnerable to catastrophic hurricanes.

Such storms are a growing threat. An Associated Press analysis of industry data found that severe weather is the leading cause of major outages on the nation’s power grid. The number of weather-related power outages has climbed over the last decade, with the greatest spikes in 2008 and 2011, according to the AP analysis and independent studies.

That leaves Coast Electric and other utilities across the country balancing customer costs with the need for improvements to counter the rising number of violent storms, floods and droughts threatening the U.S. power grid.

Katrina pummeled the Mississippi coast in August 2005, knocking out power to Coast Electric’s entire coverage area.

Facing sweltering summer heat and $110 million in damage, the small nonprofit cooperative focused on restoring power quickly, said vice president of engineering Scott Brown. The substations that flooded were repaired to pre-storm conditions — at the time, it would have been impractical to raise them or move them elsewhere.

“We’re only a few feet above sea level right here,” Brown said during a recent visit to a substation in the coastal town of Waveland.

Coast Electric made some major improvements post-Katrina, like elevating a new substation 18 feet above sea level. But raising the old substations that flooded would cost Coast’s 68,160 customers millions of dollars, Brown said.

Several thousand companies own and manage the equipment that makes up the U.S. power grid, from small municipal utilities and cooperatives like Coast Electric to large investor-owned companies like New York’s Consolidated Edison.

When Hurricane Irene hit the Northeast in 2011, it marked the first time that more than 200,000 Con Ed customers lost power from a storm. Superstorm Sandy struck 14 months later, followed by a devastating Nor’easter, leaving 1.1 million customers in the dark.

“It was clear to us that weather patterns were changing fundamentally. Severe weather events were becoming more frequent and devastating,” Allan Drury, a Con Ed spokesman, said in an email.

Con Ed is spending $1 billion to harden its system.

There are funds available from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to help utilities rebuild after catastrophes. The Mississippi cooperative received about $100 million in FEMA public assistance grants, but the money allowed it only to repair the flooded substations to pre-storm conditions.

Utilities in other parts of the country face different challenges.

Last year, regulators in drought-stricken California ordered the state’s investor-owned utilities to set priorities for inspecting and removing dead and sick trees near their power lines, warning that “climate change has facilitated and exacerbated numerous wildfires” that have damaged and threatened their facilities. Utilities could ask the California Public Utilities Commission for additional funds to address wildfire threats, regulators said.

But after a wildfire killed two people, destroyed 475 homes and scorched 70,000 acres in the Sierra Nevada foothills in September, homeowners and their attorneys are asking whether San Francisco-based Pacific Gas & Electric Co. did enough to clear dry trees flanking its power lines.

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