by MarkJ » Sat 06 Sep 2008, 10:04:28
Most of the power outages in my region of the Northeast are due to winter storms (ice, wet snow, freezing rain, wind and accidents taking down lines, poles, trees and limbs)
Many people in the region (outside the cities) are mechanically inclined, self sufficient types that have efficient homes, alternative heat, light, propane, generators, inverters, chainsaws etc, so the short lived outages aren't a big deal. Downed trees and limbs equals free firewood.
When there's an extended power outage, we get flooded with calls from customers that don't realize their boilers, furnaces, water heaters, well pumps, pressure tanks etc need electricity to operate. Since they don't want their pipes to freeze, and don't want their basements to flood, they often head to Home Depot, Lowes, Tractor Supply and the hardware stores to buy generators. When they get back home, the power is often back on, or comes back on before they figure out how to plug in their sump pumps, water heaters, furnaces or boilers without back-feeding the grid, frying the electronics or zapping themselves.
Our New York state average for electric is around 17¢/Kwh, but we don't hear many people complaining since we don't use much electric in comparison to regions of the country with heavy A/C usage.
Overall, our power outages are few and generally short lived. The crews do a pretty good job of restoring power in a short period of time.
IMO, cheap electric just leads to more consumption. When we used to have cheap electric, our region was flooded with electric water heaters, electric baseboard heat, inefficient central A/C (plus window units) and inefficient appliances (washers, dryers, refrigerators, freezers, extra refrigerators/freezers etc)