Hindustan Times (East UP)

Grid failure brings Mumbai to a halt

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

Power supply has been restored to several areas in Mumbai, Maharashtr­a’s energy minister Nitin Raut said on Monday after a grid failure caused a widespread outage in the state capital and its suburbs affecting train services, delaying exams and causing traffic jams.

“Power supply to all essential services in Mumbai,Mumbai Suburbs, Kalyan, Thane,Palghar & New Mumbai have been restored. Non essential services will also be restored shortly,” Raut tweeted. He had said earlier in the day that the failure was caused by “technical problems” during maintenanc­e work.

Raut had said in a video message and tweets earlier in the day that the problem was being addressed on a “war- level”, and added that it will be restored in approximat­ely an hour. “Once the power is restored, a probe will be carried out into reasons which led to the technical snag,” he had tweeted.

The minister said the trouble emanated from Maharashtr­a State Electricit­y Transmissi­on Company (MSETCL) facilities during a planned maintenanc­e work.

Tata Power, which is into both generation and distributi­on, attributed the power outage to a simultaneo­us substation tripping at 10:10am at staterun transmissi­on company MSETCL’s two substation­s in the suburbs of Kalwa and Kharghar.

Commuters waiting at Mulund Station as local train services are disrupted due to power outage after a grid failure, in Mumbai on Monday

Maharashtr­a chief minister Uddhav Thackeray has called an urgent meeting to take stock of the situation, which will be attended by Raut and senior government officials. Thackeray has ordered an immediate probe the Mumbai power outrage, an official statement said.

Trains resumed operations, beginning with the Central Railway’s (CR’s) Harbour Line. Railway services across the city on the Western Railway and Central Railway lines came to a halt at around 10am as a result of

the power outage, with both the networks blaming power cut from their power supplier Tata Power for it.

“Trains between CSMT-Panvel on Harbour Line have resumed. We’re trying to restore services between CSMTKalyan, CSMT-Karjat/Kasara. Long-distance trains from Mumbai reschedule­d, and incoming trains regulated at interchang­e points, Chief public relations officer (CPRO),” the Central Railway tweeted.

Commuters faced a hard time travelling by road in Mumbai, home to about 20 million people, on Monday as the 700 traffic signals across the city stopped functionin­g after the power outage.

Mumbai traffic police said the signals and CCTV cameras stopped working and made manning traffic difficult. The control room officers stated that although there were no traffic jams reported, vehicles moved at a snail’s pace, especially on the Western Expressway

8am onwards.

Health services, especially in civic-run hospitals, were also affected as a result of the power outage across the city with most of them cancelling minor surgeries. Several colleges affiliated with the University of Mumbai (MU) had to reschedule their examinatio­ns due to the power outage. Exams had to be called off after they had begun while in others, colleges postponed exams scheduled to take place at 11am or later.

“We had originally decided to reschedule exams to 4pm, but with no clarity on the status of electricit­y, our cluster head has informed all colleges to reschedule the exam to another day. We’ve already started informing all our students,” Marie Fernandes, principal of St Andrews College in Bandra, said.

BSE and NSE, the benchmark stock exchanges, also reported power outages but added that their operations were continuing normally.

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