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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
July
Transmission congestion
threatens to clog nation's power grid
Mark Reutter,
Business & Law Editor
217-333-0568; mreutter@uiuc.edu
7/27/06
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| University
of Illinois Photo |
George
Gross, a U. of I. professor of electrical and computer
engineering, says the immediate problems that led
to the nation’s worst power failure three years
ago on Aug. 14, 2003, have been addressed.
But the broader problems of transmission congestion
and bottlenecks continue to threaten the reliability
of the grid, particularly during periods of peak demand.
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— Inadequate investment in the power grid transmission network
remains the Achilles heel of the nation’s electric system, an
engineer who specializes in utility policy at the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign says.
The electric industry and government regulators have addressed the immediate
problems that led to the nation’s worst power failure three years
ago on Aug. 14, 2003, said George Gross, a U. of I. professor of electrical
and computer engineering. This includes mandatory reliability standards
for the industry, which were passed by Congress as part of the 2005
Energy Policy Act.
But the broader problems of transmission congestion and bottlenecks
continue to threaten the reliability of the grid, particularly during
periods of peak demand.
“The August 2003 blackout was a wake-up call for the country to
upgrade its transmission grid system,” Gross said. “But
the truth is that very few major transmission projects have been constructed
and, as a result, transmission capacity has failed to keep pace with
the expansion of power demand.”
In the period between 1988 and 1998, for example, growth in electric
demand grew by 30 percent, but growth in transmission capacity was just
15 percent, Gross said.
The 2003 blackout prompted calls for spending of up to $100 billion
to reduce bottlenecks and increase capacity of the transmission lines
that carry electricity from power plants to homes and businesses.
Instead, investment has lagged behind both power-plant generation and
growth in demand for electricity. “Demand growth is forecasted
to be 20 percent between 1998-2008, but the increase in transmission
capacity is still below 5 percent,” Gross said.
“The need to strengthen the existing transmission infrastructure,
to expand it and to effectively harness advances in technology constitutes
the single most pressing challenge for the country’s electricity
system.”
Gross recommended the introduction of incentives to spur utilities and
transmission companies to increase capacity. In addition, state regulatory
agencies should show more initiative in encouraging new power networks
that cross state lines and serve a regional rather than strictly local
purpose.
The August 2003 blackout left more than 50 million people without electricity
in Canada and the northeastern U.S. and cost at least $10 billion in
lost economic activity.
A heat wave in California this week has resulted in cutbacks in electrical
use by government agencies and businesses to avoid the kind of rolling
blackouts that plagued the state in 2000 and 2001.
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