Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Power line protection problem defies all attempts at an easy fix

- By Ellen Knickmeyer and Jocelyn Gecker

WASHINGTON — Trees toppling onto above-ground power lines spark wildfires, more than 1,000 of them in the last decade in California alone.

The wires snap in blizzards and hurricanes, causing dayslong outages. Everywhere, power poles topple in all kinds of disasters, blocking escape routes.

Around the U.S., dealing with the vulnerabil­ity of overhead power lines by burying them or strengthen­ing them is spotty and disorganiz­ed on a national level and painfully slow at best.

Utilities say that there’s no one best way to safeguard the millions of miles of U.S. power lines and that doing so would cost many billions of dollars, $3 million for a single mile of power lines by some estimates.

Critics counter by pointing to the at least equally great economic costs of outages and utility-sparked wildfires. Estimated property losses for a single such wildfire, a California blaze that killed 85 last year, reached $16.5 billion.

Overall, electrical outages caused by bad weather cost the U.S. economy up to $33 billion in an average year, and more in an especially bad weather year, the Energy Department estimated in 2013. The researcher­s estimated that there were 679 widespread outages from harsh weather between 2003 and 2012.

After electrical wires sparked many of California’s major wildfires in 2017 and 2018 and threatened more this autumn, many there turned their fear and anger on PG&E, the state’s largest investor-owned utility.

Vicki McCaslin, a 60-yearold repeat evacuee in the San Francisco Bay Area, described spotting a PG&E worker in her neighborho­od during a lull in last month’s wind and fires.

McCaslin burst into tears as she begged the utility worker to cut off power to her area before the winds and wildfires resumed, she recounted.

“It scares me to death to think of those kinds of winds with our power on,” she said.

Nationally, experts say, problems with 19th-century-style setups of wires dangling from wooden poles will only grow.

It’s a problem nationwide, not just in California. In coastal states such as Florida, hurricanes topple poles and knock out power for days. And in heartland states like Minnesota, it’s wintry ice storms and high winds that bring the electrical wires crashing down.

Crucially, though, it’s not a nationally regulated problem. That means that across the country, involvemen­t and funding from the federal government on burying and otherwise strengthen­ing community electrical grids have been scattered and small-scale.

That’s because it’s state and local officials, not federal ones, who hold most of the direct regulatory authority over local electrical infrastruc­ture and local utility rates, said Ted Kury, director of energy studies for the University of Florida’s Public Utility Research Center.

Federal regulators’ role is largely limited to overseeing high-voltage transmissi­on lines that cross state borders.

A 2012 study estimated that nationwide one-fourth of new power lines are buried.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency’s hazard-mitigation program has handed out $176 million for 156 projects to bury power lines in 16 states and four U.S. territorie­s, FEMA says. Florida, where Gov. Ron DeSantis

signed legislatio­n this year to encourage moving power lines undergroun­d, has been one of the top recipients, along with Minnesota.

But the FEMA hazard mitigation grants for the work so far break down to a little more than $1 million per project. In California, where PG&E oversees 100,000 miles of overhead electrical lines, that average size of grant doesn’t cover the price tag PG&E puts on burying a single mile of line.

That mostly leaves households with the bill for doing any burying of power lines, mostly through increased electrical rates.

In some places, burying the electrical lines is all but physically impossible, utilities and others argue.

In parts of California’s Sierra Nevada and other ranges, for instance, that would entail excavating into granite.

In Florida, Mike Hyland, senior vice president of the American Public Power Associatio­n for community-owned utilities, has seen utilities try and fail to bury cable in the unstable sand.

Utility companies argue that in some parts of the country, burying power lines would make problems worse, especially as storms and sea rise worsen with climate change.

Hyland points to Superstorm Sandy in 2012, when a nearly 14-foot tidal surge flooded undergroun­d electrical networks even as the storm toppled abovegroun­d lines, depriving more than 8 million people of power.

For electric utilities looking at how to harden their networks against the varied climate change potpourri of sea rise, heavy rains, wind, drought and wildfires, “it’s all these scenarios coming at you,” Hyland said. “Plus at the end of the day you’ve got a squirrel jumping on your lines.”

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 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i The Associated Press ?? Pacific Gas & Electric workers bury utility lines in Paradise, Calif., on Oct. 18. California says sparks from power lines and other electrical equipment caused many of the state’s major wildfires in 2017 and 2018.
Rich Pedroncell­i The Associated Press Pacific Gas & Electric workers bury utility lines in Paradise, Calif., on Oct. 18. California says sparks from power lines and other electrical equipment caused many of the state’s major wildfires in 2017 and 2018.

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