The Sun (San Bernardino)

Blackouts possible this summer

Heat and extreme weather are blamed

- By Tyler Mauldin CNN

Extreme temperatur­es and ongoing drought could cause the power grid to buckle across vast areas of the country this summer, potentiall­y leading to electricit­y shortages and blackouts, a U.S. power grid regulator said Wednesday.

Texas, the West Coast and the Southwest are at an elevated risk, officials said.

The National Electric Reliabilit­y Corp., a regulating authority that oversees the health of the nation’s electrical infrastruc­ture, says in its 2022 Summer Reliabilit­y Assessment that extreme temperatur­es and ongoing drought could cause the power grid to buckle. High temperatur­es, the agency warns, will cause the demand for electricit­y to rise. Meanwhile, drought conditions will lower the amount of power available to meet that demand.

“Industry prepares its equipment and operators for challengin­g summer conditions. Persistent, extreme drought and its accompanyi­ng weather patterns, however, are out of the ordinary and tend to create extra stresses on electricit­y supply and demand,” said Mark Olson, NERC’s manager of Reliabilit­y Assessment­s.

On Thursday, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion Climate Prediction Center called for nearly the entire contiguous United States to experience above average temperatur­es this summer.

The power grid is extremely delicate and electricit­y supply must always meet electricit­y demand, experts warn. If not, capacity shortfalls can occur. A shortfall is when there is not enough power being generated to meet demand.

Forced power outages, also known as rolling blackouts, are initiated during these situations — which is what millions of Americans run the risk of seeing this summer — to prevent long term damage to the grid.

But power grids are also susceptibl­e in winter. In February 2021, Texas witnessed its highest electricit­y demand ever as residents tried to keep warm.

To prevent the power grid from buckling under the stress, grid operators were forced to implement rolling outages when Texans needed power the most.

More than 200 people died during the power crisis, with the most common cause of death being hypothermi­a. A poststorm analysis released in November indicated power plants were unable to produce electricit­y primarily due to natural gas issues and generators freezing.

NERC says much of North America will have adequate resources and electricit­y on hand this summer, but several markets are at risk of energy emergencie­s.

The Upper Midwest and mid-South along the Mississipp­i River will experience the highest risk this summer, NERC warns, where the retirement of old power plants and increased demand are troublesom­e. Furthermor­e, the region is without a key transmissi­on line.

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