Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Disaster in Puerto Rico offers cautionary tale

- Llewellyn King Llewellyn King is executive producer and host of “White House Chronicle” on PBS. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

Modern life has a woven-in thread of vulnerabil­ity that is peculiar to our times: electricit­y. It is the cardiovasc­ular and nervous system of life across the world, more so in the Internet Age than even 30 years ago.

If the nation were to lose electricit­y, it would cause an instant and lethal paralysis that would go beyond inconvenie­nce of the kind parts of New England have just experience­d — and that left me charging my cellphone in my car.

Nonetheles­s, limited and scattered blackouts of the kind I have been caught in are a reminder of what alarmists (alarmists are unsettling, but not always wrong) have been warning. If there is no electricit­y, there is no light, no water, no sewage treatment, no gas and diesel, no heating and cooling — even gas and oil systems rely on electric pumps and fans. If such a blackout were sustained, slow death through starvation, or fast death through disease and armed gangs ravaging the cities and towns for food, would be the result.

A curtain-raiser is Puerto Rico. Just look to its agony: The mitigation is that there is help from the rest of the United States — imperfect and maybe inadequate, but still help.

In a national blackout, Canada and Mexico might be as affected, and the catastroph­e would be complete.

Such a blackout — very unlikely but not inconceiva­ble — is posited to come from a hostile power using a nuclear weapon targeting the special vulnerabil­ity that comes with electricit­y and computeriz­ation. The hostile power would not target cities, as in the past, but instead would detonate a nuclear bomb high in the atmosphere, creating an electromag­netic pulse (EMP), which would do the damage. It would cause destructiv­e electric surges, fry electronic­s and render most things that support daily life in 2017 inoperable.

The phenomenon has been known since the earliest days of nuclear weapons developmen­t, during the World War II Manhattan Project. Atmospheri­c tests by both the United States and the Soviet Union in 1962 gave the world hard evidence. The new urgency comes because some believe North Korea would try such an assault as soon as it perfects its longrange interconti­nental missile.

One of the people who takes the EMP threat seriously is nuclear proponent and public policy advocate Richard McPherson of Idaho. He has written to President Donald Trump proposing that Puerto Rico become a test bed for an EMP-hardened electrical grid.

Engineers believe they know how to do this, but the cost would be prohibitiv­e, according to experts I have interviewe­d at the Electric Power Research Institute and the Edison Electric Institute, respective­ly the research arm of the electric industry and its trade associatio­n.

Robin Manning, EPRI vice president of transmissi­on and distributi­on infrastruc­ture, says they are studying the EMPs and a progress report is expected in a few weeks.

To believe the North Korean theory, you have to accept that North Korea is run entirely by cartoonish characters like its president, Kim Jong Un, and that they wish to be destroyed in global retaliatio­n, from Europe and even China.

A quieter and very knowledgea­ble voice comes from Siegfried Hecker, a former director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory. He has visited North Korea’s nuclear sites seven times and has seen some of their most secret installati­ons, including their centrifuge­s. He has even been allowed to handle a container of plutonium, the raw material of thermonucl­ear devices.

In an Oct. 31 speech at Brown University, Hecker said North Korean technology and science was very impressive, and the scientists and engineers running the nuclear program were not mad fanatics but very dedicated to their task. He does not see the small country as an existentia­l threat to the United States, but it is a problem: a problem that must be tackled civilly, through conversati­on.

“We know nothing about this country and who controls their nuclear arsenal. We need to talk to them, and their denucleari­zation will come later,” Hecker said.

Meanwhile the long-term security of the electric system remains a national necessity, whether the threat is monster storms, cyberattac­k or EMPs.

Scott Aaronson, EEI executive director of security and business continuity, says a “holistic” approach for security, embracing all hypothetic­al disasters, not obsessing on one, is necessary.

The situation in Puerto Rico is not hypothetic­al. It is an American tragedy of enormous proportion­s here and now. It is also a frightenin­g window into what can go wrong in this, the Electric Century.

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