The Borneo Post

Work to restore electricit­y to Marudi on-going

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MIRI: Work on restoring electricit­y supply to Marudi town is going on after some 4,000 customers suffered power outage around 4pm Thursday.

A snapped conductor or overhead power line had caused the Marudi Junction substation to trip Thursday afternoon when the safety mechanism kicked in.

Sarawak Energy vice president of Distributi­on Yusri Safri said extensive repair work to fix a fault on a high tension 33kV tower in Marudi is taking longer than estimated due to extreme bad weather and dangerous flood waters.

“We are focusing on getting supply restored and ensuring critical facilities have electricit­y by providing seven mobile gensets. Our technical team was deployed to the site immediatel­y following the alert on supply interrupti­on yesterday (Thursday),” said Sufri in a statement.

Three gensets arrived around midnight from Miri and four more were deployed yesterday morning.

“The gensets are sufficient to power up 80 per cent of Marudi excluding the rural areas,” he said.

According to Sufri, the tower’s location in the jungle with no road access was made more challengin­g with flood waters and thundersto­rm hampering accessibil­ity and the safe start of repair works.

He disclosed that Sarawak Energy’s technical team was only able to reach the site after two attempts at 4am yesterday as accessibil­ity was hampered by flood waters and extremely muddy conditions.

“Even then, they could not start repair works immediatel­y for safety reasons due to weather conditions,” said Sufri, adding that they finally located the fault at the tower in torrential thundersto­rm.

Sufri revealed that preliminar­y investigat­ion showed that lightning might have damaged the conductors. Repair was still on going as at press time yesterday.

“Another operations team managing the deployment of mobile gensets since midnight is on standby.

“We truly regret the inconvenie­nce caused and assure the people of Marudi that we are accelerati­ng work to restore supply safely,” he added.

Sufri pointed out that regular patrols check the 44km power lines traversing forested areas and private oil palm plantation­s while vegetation is cleared periodical­ly to minimise supply interrupti­on.

 ??  ?? Broken conductors on 33kV high tension tower (circled).
Broken conductors on 33kV high tension tower (circled).

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