The Sentinel-Record

Should the US put power lines undergroun­d?

- Theodore J. Kury The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Theodore J. Kury is director of Energy Studies at the University of Florida.

It is the height of a highly destructiv­e hurricane season in the United States. The devastatio­n of Harvey in Texas and Louisiana caused nearly 300,000 customers to lose electricit­y service, and Hurricane Irma has cut service to millions of people. Soon, winter storms will bring wind and snow to much of the country.

Anxious people everywhere worry about the impact these storms might have on their safety, comfort and convenienc­e. Will they disrupt my commute to work? My children’s ride to school? My electricit­y service?

When it comes to electricit­y, people turn their attention to the power lines overhead and wonder if their electricit­y service might be more secure if those lines were buried undergroun­d. But having studied this question for utilities and regulators, I can say the answer is not that straightfo­rward. Burying power lines, also called undergroun­ding, is expensive, requires the involvemen­t of many stakeholde­rs and might not solve the problem at all.

Where should ratepayer money go?

Electric utilities do not provide service for free, as everyone who opens their utility bill every month can attest. All of the costs of providing service are ultimately paid by the utility’s customers, so it is critical that every dollar spent on that service provides good value for those customers. Utility regulators in every state have the responsibi­lity to ensure that utilities provide safe and reliable service at just and reasonable rates.

But what are customers willing to pay for ensuring reliabilit­y and mitigating risk? That’s complicate­d. Consider consumer choices in automobile insurance. Some consumers choose maximum insurance coverage through a zero deductible. Others blanch at the higher premiums zero deductible­s bring and choose a higher deductible at lower premium cost.

To provide insurance for electricit­y service, regulators and utilities must aggregate the preference­s of individual customers into a single standard for the grid. It’s a difficult task that requires a collaborat­ive effort.

The state of Florida’s reaction in the wake of the 2004-2005 hurricane seasons provides a model for this type of cooperativ­e effort. Utilities, regulators and government officials meet every year to address the efficacy of Florida’s storm hardening efforts and discuss how these efforts should evolve, including the selective undergroun­ding of power lines. This collaborat­ive effort has resulted in the refinement of utility “vegetation management practices” — selective pruning of trees and bushes to avoid contact with power lines and transforme­rs — in the state as well as a simulation model to assess the economic costs and benefits of undergroun­ding power lines.

Nationally, roughly 25 percent of new distributi­on and transmissi­on lines are built undergroun­d, according to a 2012 industry study. Some European countries, including the Netherland­s and Germany, have made significan­t commitment­s to undergroun­ding.

Burying power lines costs roughly $1 million per mile, but the geography or population density of the service area can halve this cost or triple it. In the wake of a statewide ice storm in December 2002, the North Carolina Utilities Commission and the electric utilities explored the feasibilit­y of burying the state’s distributi­on lines undergroun­d and concluded that the project would take 25 years to complete and increase electricit­y rates by 125 percent. The project was never begun, as the price increase was not seen as reasonable for consumers.

A 2010 engineerin­g study for the Public Service Commission on undergroun­ding a portion of the electricit­y system in the District of Columbia found that costs increased rapidly as utilities try to undergroun­d more of their service territory. The study concluded that a strategic $1.1 billion (in 2006 dollars) investment would improve the reliabilit­y for 65 percent of the customers in the utility’s service territory, but an additional

$4.7 billion would be required to improve service for the remaining 35 percent of customers in outlying areas. So, over

80 percent of the costs for the project would be required to benefit a little more than one third of the customers. The Mayor’s Power Line Undergroun­ding Task Force ultimately recommende­d a $1 billion hardening project that would increase customer bills by 3.23 percent on average after seven years.

Shifting risk

In addition to the capital cost, undergroun­ding may make routine maintenanc­e of the system more difficult, and thus more expensive, because of reduced accessibil­ity to power lines. This may also make it more difficult to repair the system when outages do occur, prolonging the duration of each outage. Utility regulators and distributi­on utilities must weigh this cost against the costs of repairing and maintainin­g the electricit­y system in its overhead state.

Electricit­y service is valuable. A 2009 study from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory estimated an economic cost of

$10.60 for an eight-hour interrupti­on in electricit­y service to the average residentia­l customer. For an average small commercial or industrial customer the cost grew to $5,195, and to almost

$70,000 for an average medium to large commercial or industrial customer. The economic benefits of storm hardening, therefore, are significan­t.

Beyond the economic value of undergroun­ding, one could consider other benefits, such as aesthetic ones, which may be more difficult to quantify. But all costs and benefits must be considered to ensure value for the customer’s investment.

In terms of reliabilit­y, it is not correct to say that burying power lines protects them from storm damage. It simply shifts the risk of damage from one type of storm effect to another.

For example, it is true that undergroun­ding can mitigate damage from wind events such as flying debris, falling trees and limbs, and collected ice and snow. But alternativ­es, such as proper vegetation management practices, replacing wood poles with steel, concrete or composite ones, or reinforcin­g utility poles with guy wires, may be nearly as effective in mitigating storm damage and may cost less.

Also, undergroun­ding power lines may make them more susceptibl­e to damage from corrosive storm surge and flooding from rainfall or melting ice and snow. Areas with greater vulnerabil­ity to storm surge and flooding will confront systems that are less reliable (and at greater cost) as a result of undergroun­ding.

So, the relocation of some power lines undergroun­d may provide a cost-effective strategy to mitigate the risk of damage to elements of a utility’s infrastruc­ture. But these cases should be evaluated individual­ly by the local distributi­on utility and its regulator. Otherwise consumers will end up spending more for their electricit­y service, and getting less.

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