Thursday, October 3, 2024

Powerless?

 

It looks like the damage wreaked by Hurricane Helene is going to last a whole lot longer than people might wish.  The electrical grid in North Carolina and Georgia looks to have suffered really severe damage.


"Distribution transformers are a bedrock component of our energy infrastructure," National Renewable Energy Laboratory researcher Killian McKenna said, who was recently quoted by PV Magazine. 

McKenna pointed out, "But utilities needing to add or replace them are currently facing high prices and long wait times due to supply chain shortages. This has the potential to affect energy accessibility, reliability, affordability—everything."

Other reasons for the transformer shortages besides power grid upgrades include raw material sourcing problems, pandemic-related supply chain woes and backlogs, labor constraints, shipping issues, and geopolitical tensions. 

Given all of this, Jesse D. Jenkins, an assistant professor and macro-energy systems engineering and policy expert at Princeton University, responded to the dire situation of a grid apocalypse playing out in the Southeast US:  "This is devastating. We do NOT have 360 substations worth of transformers and other electrical equipment sitting in stockpiles waiting to be deployed. It could take a very long time to restore power to everyone. Are we facing a Hurricane Maria-type impact on grid infrastructure?"

Making matters worse for residents of North Carolina, some X users are pointing out the Biden-Harris administration supplied transformers to Ukraine. It's unclear if these transformers were drained for US stockpiles. Meanwhile, others note that Ukraine uses a different electrical system than the US.

What's not questionable is this: Earlier this year, US ambassador to Kyiv Bridget Brink jumped for joy on X, indicating United States Agency for International Development delivered "50 voltage transformers, 9 current transformers, & 80 isolators."


There's more at the link.

I had an interesting exchange on that subject with a correspondent today.  He's a retired electrical engineer who spent his career with major utilities and power transmission systems.  He said he's hearing from former colleagues that an unspecified federal agency is approaching major power utilities in multiple states, asking them to shut down one or two sub-stations in major urban areas and make their equipment available to hurricane-affected areas.  The utilities are being reassured that this would "only" mean that they'd have to cut power for "an hour or two at a time" to nearby suburbs, rotating the load among their other sub-stations.  This would "share the survivors' load" with their customers, who would surely not complain at being asked to provide relief of this kind.  He told me that the utilities concerned (at least, the ones where he has contacts) are refusing to even consider the proposal, on the grounds that if they were to shut down local consumers because areas hundreds or even thousands of miles away had problems, those same consumers would start shooting at their trucks (and their workers) as they tried to dismantle and haul away the selected sub-stations.  Sounds to me like they know their customers!

The extent of the fallout from Hurricane Helene's damage has only just begun to be realized.  It's going to take, not months, but years to get over the worst of it.  To name just a few points:

  • The demand for domestic generators in the affected areas is already off the charts, and if sub-stations can't be restored, they'll be in use for months - something consumer-grade generators are not designed to do.
  • Can consumers afford the fuel cost to run them, and also to replace them when they wear out - and will replacements be available?
  • Meanwhile, what happens if a major international crisis threatens or delays the ordering and/or shipment of replacement sub-station and transmission line equipment from China - apparently the only country that now manufactures much of what's needed?

Got batteries?

Peter


25 comments:

  1. The industry and others have been complaining about the shortage of electrical grid equipment for over last two decades. Especially in the case of diasters, either natural or manmade. The problem wa known and solutions were purposed. It was estimated that a surplus of equipment could have been purchased and ready for a mere 2-4 billion.

    But the lack of electrical power isn't important to the elite unless it affects their neighborhoods or their wasteful vanity AI projects.

    And it's the same with other resources. FEMA is out of money due to supported the invasion of illegals into the country instead of doing their actual role. The regional military units that help with national diasters are on standby to assist Israel blow more US taxplayer money overseas fight a war that was enabled by money sent to Iran by the current adminstration.

    The message being sent from DC is the same: Die, you sheep.

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  2. If all this isn't a Wake-Up Call I don't know what is; we have reached the point where not only can localities not depend on the U.S. federal government for support - of any kind - in periods of severe distress, the federal government has become a negative in such situations.

    The Individual Citizen, then Local, then Regional and then (maybe) State must become the foundational philosophy. Washington is not just worthless, it is, and will continue to be, an impediment. The only unknown is how big an impediment.

    "But Trump will solve these problems." Sure, and the Easter Bunny and Santa Claus are real. If Trump does nothing else but shrink the fed dot gov back into its Constitutional corral so we can devote our money and time to local issues there will be statues erected to honor him in every town and village in the country.

    And, for those who poo-poo such a thing, I would suggest a self-imposed reformation and retrenchment by the federal government itself would be vastly preferable to how the citizens would do it if that becomes necessary

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  3. https://www.cnn.com/weather/live-news/hurricane-helene-damage-north-carolina-10-02-24#cm1s23gpl0000356o6umlriwy

    Mobile substations available and being installed

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  4. That story sounds odd. If the equipment is being removed and relocated to hurricane-affected areas, how could anyone believe that the areas would only lose power "for a few hours"?
    For that matter how does an "unnamed federal agency" reassure a power utility about anything at all related to power delivery?

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    Replies
    1. Every region has excess capacity in normal times, so there is enough for peak demand. What will happen here is the utilities donating equipment would no longer have the capacity to meet peak demand, meaning rationing in the form of rotating blackouts during peak load conditions

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  5. Maybe the guv will use our tax dollars to buy solar and batteries for each of the affected homes. Would be part of the great green solution? Better to spend the money on a strategic manf plant for electric infrastructure I think.

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  6. Lead time on the big transformers is 2 years under good conditions. Now?

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  7. I'm going to guess that Musk's next disaster relief move will be to deploy Tesla solar as widely as possible to give folks some individual access to electricity.

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  8. There's another little problem with replacement transformers, and it's call the Depart of Energy. They finalized a new mandating "more efficient" transformers." Which means current design xfrmrs are a a no-no, and we'll have to wait for redesign, sourcing, and manufacture.

    All this because The Xiden-Kneepads administration just assumed that the power distribution industry was too efffing stupid to use the most efficient xfrmrs reasonably possible, without being forced to do it.

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  9. No mention in any stories that I've seen about the effects of climate change on EV owners in the affected area. I'm assuming that they are even more screwed than everyone else.

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  10. Our local electric co-ops are sending a large amount of their spares to Eastern TN. They did the same for us when we had the large damaging tornado several years ago.

    I agree completely, we need domestic production of critical parts and/or a large inventory of them.

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  11. I worked around the shops that used to repair transformers. PCB's and pollution oh my. Forget the Govt mandated use of PCBs, then the EPA declared cleanup the company's problem. Well, the work was relatively low margin and repairs were sporadic. Power is a seasonal business and repairs are random. The accounts in charge of the company wanted good steady work that made predicting margins easy so they wouldn't get in trouble with Wall Street. Old, crusty guys did the work at their own pace (The Accts could not fathom non-accountants knew what they were doing) and eventually it became overseas work. Oh, and inventory in a warehouse is taxed in all but 11 states, but that may have changed. Accountants hate safety stock. Too many local substations were close to unique. Lack of standardization is an issue. Spending money to upgrade and standardize is an issue. We were supposed to save money with deregulation but no one ever addressed the amount of taxes being paid. When I was in NY the cost of power was national average UNTIL the state taxes were piled on top.

    If we want to MAGA we need to quit counting pennies for the next quarterly report and actually being investing in upgrading and repairing our infrastructure. Back when companies were regulated they did a pretty fair job of controlling cost but also maintaining reliability and safety stocks.

    For the love of money is the root of all evil.

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    Replies
    1. Yes. Terrible, nasty, shit used in the manufacture of transformers. That's why we let other countries do it now. I don't have any answers, but I don't blame companies in the U.S. for not wanting to do it with the potential EPA penalties.

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  12. There seems to be an undertone of OMG!!111!! Hurricane recovery will take months!!! what will the sheeple dooooo???? throughout a lot of the media and even alt media. My reaction is "So what? That's how it ALWAYS works." I'm in Houston Texas, and have been here for over 20 years. During that time, we've had a dozen major weather events, or more, and it always takes time to recover.

    Months and years even.

    So why would this one be any different?

    Disasters suck. They disrupt and end lives. They cost a ton of money. The emotional toll is great.

    The national press moves on in about three days when the wind and flood damage are in Texas or Florida and they rarely even mention when there is destruction in the other Gulf Coast states.

    We are still feeling the economic effects of 2017's HARVEY in my neighborhood. We were slated for storm drain upgrades and street work but the budget was used for Harvey repairs and the work still hasn't happened.

    I know it's the distraction de jure, but it's not significantly different from any of the other floods and hurricanes that have devastated various areas in the last 20 years.

    It is, and should be a "teachable moment" about preparedness. It should be a time to assess response plans, and response actions, so that changes can be made, lessons can be learned, and outcomes can be improved for next time. Because there will be a next time. And a time after that, and after that...

    The shoothouse rules apply.

    n

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  13. And getting fuel (gasoline presumably) to hundreds of 10kW and under Costco portable generators in the short term? And all those Costco and Horror Freight generators made in China? Wow.

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  14. Another result of the .gov's desire to tax everything. When they started taxing inventory, we went to the "just in time" with no margins, nothing stored for a foreseeable problem. Inventory helped smooth out production.

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  15. FYI - a different sort of power in WW2 Australia

    “The unsung timber product during war time”

    Charcoal and producer gas in WW 2

    https://www.robertonfray.com/2024/10/04/the-unsung-timber-product-during-war-time/

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  16. I am not a big electrical power distribution guy but I do have some familiarity with generation and distribution of electrical power. I cannot believe distribution substations that have been flooded cannot be restored or that pole pigs that are not physical compromised cannot be reused. Distribution cables can be recovered and reinstalled. A hell of a difficult job but not impossible.

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  17. Oil lamps and lanterns and kerosene [not paraffin oil] are good things to have.

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  18. America uses 60HZ, Europe uses (generally) 50HZ, as long as it's AC voltage the transformer doesn't care.

    For Peter....

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  19. I find it interesting that between Global Warming requiring electric cars and 'Rogue State EMP prevention' requiring major upgrades to our electrical distribution systems since the 1990s that absolutely nothing was actually done to make our distribution system more robust.

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  20. We were without power for 18 hours when the storm caused a big oak to fall across the power lines. I had emergency lanterns and batteries and power packs all ready but they were approaching their limit as the power cane back up. Im recharging everything and buying new batteries and rethinking what to do if the power goes out for days.

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  21. Well, from Demonrat history they've been the party of over spending and raising the debt and just like Harris giving out dollups in a disaster such as Helene while wasting gobs of our money on the ridiculous where they get back their 10% for themselves.

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  22. Quote: "The demand for domestic generators in the affected areas is already off the charts, and if sub-stations can't be restored, they'll be in use for months - something consumer-grade generators are not designed to do."
    Really. Is that a fact. So, you're telling me that the generator that I bought for emergencies, is unlikely to last for more than a few months. Hmmm.

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