Page added on July 11, 2012
No, the title of this article is not a typo. We did enter the 20th century – the early 20th century – last week. All it took was a thunderstorm.
Sometimes I am struck by how phenomenally shortsighted our national leaders are. In just 45 minutes last week, a single storm brought the capital of the U.S. to its knees for nearly a week. Millions of people were left in the dark, with no power, no telephones, no internet, and no air-conditioning during the worst heat wave in years. The damaged stretched from Ohio east into Maryland and Virginia. A national emergency? Yes. The response from the federal government? Nothing. Nada. Zip. The local governments and the privately-owned power companies were left scrambling, as usual, without the resources to fix things.
How is this possible? Simple: unusually strong winds during the storm, up to 70 mph (112 kph), knocked down huge trees everywhere. In this part of the U.S., like most of the country, all the power lines are above ground, strung between flimsy wooden poles, exactly as they were over 100 years ago. We also have lots and lots of trees in the eastern U.S. So just like that, in the blink of an eye, the high-tech region around the nation’s capital was tossed back into the early 20th century, when horse-drawn carriages ruled the day and when the only form of air-conditioning was shade.
This is pathetic. How can it be that we haven’t put our valuable infrastructure – the power and communications network – underground, where a common thunderstorm can’t touch it? This debate comes up after every storm, as it has this week (especially in the Washington and Baltimore region), and the answer is always the same: it’s too expensive. The power company immediately responded to a few tentative suggestions that the lines should be underground, lashing out that those who were making the suggestions were naive, or didn’t realize how costly it was. They then blamed the victims, saying that local governments and residents make it difficult for them to trim the trees properly.
Tree trimming? Are you kidding me? How exactly were you planning to trim the 60-foot oak that fell in my back yard, snapping the power lines feeding our neighborhood? Or the countless other huge trees that crashed through power lines?
The problem we face will never be solved by the power company. It costs money to put lines underground, lots of it. Sure, the costs of these disasters are far, far greater than the cost of “undergrounding”, but those costs aren’t paid by the power company, so why should they care? They don’t.
So yes, it is too expensive for the power company to put lines underground, so they will never, ever do it. Not on their own dime, that is. Local governments won’t solve it either: they are just too small and too poor. We need a national effort to put our valuable, all-too-vulnerable power and communications lines underground – everywhere.
What, the U.S. can’t afford it? It’s true, we have a massive debt that is getting worse each year. But somehow we can afford to build roads and other infrastructure in Iraq and Afghanistan. Our national leaders seem to think the infrastructure in those countries is more important than in our own backyard. This is just nuts.
Here’s an argument that might just reach our political leaders. Losing power and communications is a national security issue. The storm last week caused far greater disruption than any terrorist could ever hope to achieve with man-made devices. Our enemies don’t need to attack us: they can simply let us continue to spend our money bombing other countries and then rebuilding the infrastructure in those countries. Ironically, this was Reagan’s strategy with the Soviet Union: force them to spend themselves out of existence. It worked.
We need a discussion on this at the national level, where priorities need to be re-set to recognize the antequated state of our own infrastructure. Over the past decade, we’ve spent hundreds of billions of dollars destroying much of the infrastructure in Iraq and Afghanistan, and many more billions re-building some of that infrastructure. Then when a storm hits our own capital, government and industry representatives, and multiple columnists in the media, say it’s “too expensive” to put the lines underground.
And by the way, the investment to fix our power infrastructure might be large, but overall it will save money, if you account for the costs to everyone (not just the power company). The American Society of Civil Engineers estimates that
“service interruptions and capacity bottlenecks … will cost households $6 billion in 2012, $71 billion in total by 2020 and $354 billion in total by 2040. Businesses will pay $10 billion in 2012, $126 billion in 2020 and $641 billion by 2040 in avoidable costs.”
To avoid these losses, the ASCE estimates we need $11 billion in additional investment per year through 2020.
The Department of Homeland Security, created in the panic following the 9/11 attacks, hasn’t taken any responsibility for putting our national power and communications infrastructure underground. On the contrary: power crews from Canada who were coming to aid us down here in Maryland and Virginia after last week’s storm got held up at the border by our own DHS personnel, delaying some of the crews by many hours while people sweated, food spoiled, and tempers boiled. Let’s stop all this phony security theater and start rebuilding our country. Shut down the entire DHS if they can’t even keep the lights on.
And let’s bring our troops home now, today, and put them to work fixing our crumbling infrastructure. Countless news stories over the past few years have lamented the difficulties that our veterans have finding jobs when they return home: well, there’s plenty for them to do. And fixing our infrastructure – undergrounding power lines, building new roads and bridges – is a far better use of our money than blowing things up.
7 Comments on "The U.S. enters the 20th century: why we can’t keep the electricity on"
SilentRunning on Wed, 11th Jul 2012 11:34 am
Yes, it’s like the way we decided, as a nation, back 100+ years ago that underground sewers were “too expensive”. Today, we still empty our chamber pots into the streets and millions die from dysentery, but burying those sewer lines will forever remain too expensive.
Sigh.
We’ve become as a people far too lazy, timid and shortsighted.
Kenz300 on Wed, 11th Jul 2012 12:39 pm
We have become to reliant on massive centralized power providing monopolies that are more interested in squeezing out every last nickle of profit rather than worrying about quality service.
It is time to decentralize our energy system and move to more distributed power. Wind and solar prices keep dropping and are becoming more cost effective for home and businesses.
A little solar on the roof may provide that emergency power when the big provider can not.
george on Wed, 11th Jul 2012 1:14 pm
pppppfffftttt !
BillT on Wed, 11th Jul 2012 1:28 pm
“…Electric power can also be transmitted by underground power cables instead of overhead power lines. Underground cables take up less right-of-way than overhead lines, have lower visibility, and are less affected by bad weather. However, costs of insulated cable and excavation are much higher than overhead construction. Faults in buried transmission lines take longer to locate and repair. Underground lines are strictly limited by their thermal capacity, which permits less overload or re-rating than overhead lines. Long underground cables have significant capacitance, which may reduce their ability to provide useful power to loads…”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_power_transmission#Overhead_transmission
With over 186,000 miles of overhead power lines in the US, It would be impossible to put them all underground. Even at $1 million per mile average costs, that is $186 billion dollars or $600 per man, woman and child in the US. But, time wise, it is impossible.
Relocating lines underground means tearing up 186,000 miles of streets, parks, backyards, fields, parking lots, water lines, sewage lines, natural gas lines, oil pipelines, and installing access at a million points for maintenance and replacement. Crossing mountains, rivers, and desert. It means dealing with earthquakes. It means more government controls for construction.
Yes, it would have been possible 50 years ago, but not now.
Cloud9 on Wed, 11th Jul 2012 3:47 pm
I know this may come as a surprise but their are just some things the state cannot fix. The reason your area has not melted down is because people believe that we will return to normal. Lose that hope and you are going to need more than a generator.
SOS on Thu, 12th Jul 2012 2:09 am
Underground has its own set of problems. Decentralization, as already mentioned, is probably a better idea. 500 or even 5,000 losing power is better than 5 million. The cost difference between the two events might be great enough to overcome the vastly cheaper costs of the centralized system over de centralized.
The centralized system enjoy many economies of scale. It is also capabable of delivering power quickly, when and where its needed.
The centralized system cant be abandoned but our city operates its own powerplant, and Im glad they do.
Now, with natural gas so available – they flame it off in tremendous quantities in North Dakota – I can see many smaller cities and regions putting up gas fired power plants with solar/wind components.
BillT on Thu, 12th Jul 2012 2:44 am
Few cities will put up their own power plants. They will use what is already there. Is your city budget in the black or deep red? Most are in the deep red range and trying to survive, not build new power plants.
Be ready for the time when the power goes down and does NOT come back on. THAT is what you should be preparing for. And, it is coming.