fun stats on U.S. blackouts

Electric blackouts are yet another area where the hard data shows the U.S. is slipping behind other developed countries.

To put it bluntly, this kind of situation doesn’t happen everywhere. In fact, it happens more often in the U.S. than in any other developed country, according to the University of Minnesota’s Massoud Amin, a founding expert in smart-grid technology. Amin has found that utility customers lose power for an average of 4 minutes annually in Japan, compared to 92 minutes per year in the Upper Midwest.

“We are behind all other G7 nations in our infrastructure, including the power grid,” Amin said.

Yale Climate Connections

One simple (i.e. low tech but expensive) solution suggested is to bury power lines, which provides protection against both storms and freezing. I have always thought it would make sense to put utility tunnels under roads and streets. Then you could put all your utilities in there (electric, gas, water, sewer, communications) and have access to them through manholes rather than having to dig up the street. Of course, this would require up front planning and expense, it might be hard to retrofit an existing city this way, and it would require coordinating the patchwork of mostly uncoordinated public and private entities that fund and operate our infrastructure systems. Or we could try to untangle that patchwork into something that makes more sense.

We’ll need to figure something out just to keep the system functioning as it ages. At the same time, extreme weather and other disasters seem to be getting worse. There is talk of electrifying vehicles on a large scale, and some locales are shifting away from natural gas and toward electrifying more homes and businesses. Then we have the move toward more decentralized, intermittent sources of energy. And finally, there is the risk of cyber attacks and plain old fashioned attacks, whether by a serious foreign adversary or just mischief makers. Right now, foreign adversaries and mischief makers may just be sitting back and laughing at the United States as we manage to spread deadly biological agents and let our critical infrastructure fail from neglect without their help.

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