Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Power outages

Millions of homes and businesses expected to lose power after the storm.

- By Marcia Heroux Pounds Staff writer

RIVIERA BEACH — Get ready to be hot and sweaty — even inside your house.

Millions of people can expect to be out of power for “weeks, if not more,” if Hurricane Irma remains on track through South Florida, Florida Power & Light Co. said Thursday.

“This is not about repairing. It’s about replacing,” said Eric Silagy, president and CEO of the electric utility, which provides power for about half the state. He said the cost could eventually be as high as $1 billion to rebuild the company’s power grid. But after the storm, FPL will focus on getting power restored as soon as it can — grid improvemen­ts can come later.

“We’re going to get power up, get people’s lives back up and running,” he said.

As a potential Category 5 storm approaches with wind speeds ranging up to 185 mph, “the system will be under significan­t duress,” said FPL spokesman Rob Gould at a press conference at the company’s storm command center in Riviera Beach.

Even though FPL says it has “one of the strongest grids in America,” Gould said “no grid is designed to be able to withstand a Category 5 storm that has wind approachin­g 185 mph.”

FPL said it expects some houses and other buildings will be destroyed by the storm, precluding any reconnecti­ons.

“If a home is destroyed or in condition where it is uninhabita­ble, we simply can’t restore power to them,” Gould said. Those homes would have to be repaired and inspected first.

Flooding also would slow the restoratio­n process.

FPL warned homeowners to keep generators far away from their houses, to stay away from deadly downed power lines after the storm, and to refrain from using power chargers on floors, which could be dangerous with potential flooding.

Customers should report their power outages by using FPL’s mobile app or going to FPL.com. In restoring power, customers can check the app, online site or call 800-468-8243 for informatio­n through FPL’s automated system.

FPL said it has 11,000 crew members available, including workers from utilities in California and Wisconsin. The company is still recruiting more, but some repair crews remain tied up repairing damage in Texas from Hurricane Harvey. Others are waiting to see if their states will suffer damage from Irma, or from hurricanes Jose and Katia.

For Hurricane Matthew last year, FPL had 15,000 crew members ready to restore power.

Crews will be deployed to 22 staging sites around the state. FPL has mobilized thousands of employees and pieces of equipment in preparatio­n for Hurricane Irma. The company began a 24-hour storm watch on Wednesday.

FPL also said it would power down its nuclear power plants at Turkey Point in Homestead and St. Lucie in Jensen Beach in advance of hurricane-force winds. Those plants won’t be restarted until evacuation routes are safe and inspection­s are completed by the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

“Hurricane Andrew [in 1992], the eye of the storm came over the top of Turkey Point, and there was no damage to any of the nuclear components,” Gould said. “Our St. Lucie plant, during 2004 with Frances

“We’re going to get power up, get people’s lives back up and running.” Eric Silagy, Florida Power & Light Co. president and CEO

and Jeanne, also was in path of the storm and didn’t suffer any kind of damage.”

The utility has 5 million customer accounts that serve about 10 million people. And 90 percent of FPL’s customers live or work in coastal areas.

FPL said that 40 percent of its distributi­on system now is undergroun­d or “hardened” to better weather hurricane winds. Concrete and even improved wooden utility poles can withstand up to 145 mph winds, the utility said.

FPL has stockpiled than

$100 million — or nearly double the equipment it normally stores for a Category 4 storm, according to Barry Wilkinson, a logistics manager.

After Hurricane Matthew brushed past South Florida last year, FPL was able to quickly restore power in less than a week in Broward, Palm Beach and Miami-Dade counties. In that storm, winds reached a maximum of 67 miles per hour in Palm Beach County only — less than a Category 1.

During Hurricane Wilma in 2005 — the last major storm to sweep through South Florida — about 2.5 million customers lost power. It took FPL 18

days to restore the majority of electricit­y, with some customers without power for as long as three weeks.

Gould said there was “significan­t rebuild” after Hurricane Andrew, the last category 5 hurricane to hit South Florida.

Since the spate of major hurricanes that hit the state in 2004 and 2005, FPL has upgraded much of its electric grid, investing $3 billion since 2006.

The utility said it will post informatio­n on at Facebook.com/ FPLConnect and Twitter.com/InsideFPL.

 ?? TAIMY ALVAREZ/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? FPL’s Collins Substation in Fort Lauderdale has technology that helps monitor floodwater­s and mitigate storm surge. This technology helps protect critical equipment during storm surges and speeds restoratio­n.
TAIMY ALVAREZ/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER FPL’s Collins Substation in Fort Lauderdale has technology that helps monitor floodwater­s and mitigate storm surge. This technology helps protect critical equipment during storm surges and speeds restoratio­n.

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