Blackout Caused By Disregard For Rules
Apr 06 - Intelligencer Journal
WASHINGTON Disregard for voluntary rules intended to ensure the flow of electricity opened the way for last summers blackout in eight states and Canada, investigators said Monday in their final report.
Had the situation been properly addressed, the cascading blackout that sped
across states from Michigan to New York and into Canada probably would have been
averted, the report concluded. Something as simple as shutting off 200 megawatts
of power an hour before the blackout might have kept the problem from spreading,
investigators said.
But FirstEnergy Corp., the Ohio utility whose lines initially failed, had
little understanding of its own power transmission system because it had not
carried out the recommended long-term planning and safeguards and backup
monitoring system that it needed, the report said.
Many of those safeguards and procedures aimed at detecting and responding to
potentially devastating system problems, were outlined but also ignored under
voluntary industry standards that were in place, said the report.
Investigators found at least seven violations of industry- sponsored North
America Electric Reliability Council (NERC) reliability rules linked to the
blackout.
Its been eight months since the blackout, and Congress has yet to act on any
measures that might improve grid reliability. Provisions to establish mandatory
rules on the electricity industry have been caught up in a partisan fight over
broader energy legislation.
In a statement responding to the task force conclusions, Sen. Pete Domenici,
R-N.M., who has struggled for 15 months to push an energy bill through Congress,
said the report clearly says this blackout could have been avoided. He said
provisions in his energy bill address many of the shortcomings cited by the task
force.
But some Democrats said Congress should not wait for agreement on broad
energy legislation and address the electricity reliability issue immediately.
Theres no reason to let this ... get stuck in a political quagmire of the
energy bill, said Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash.DeEd Copyright © 1996-2004 by CyberTech,
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