Puerto Rico power grid braces for
hurricane season
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[May 18, 2018]
By Jessica Resnick-Ault and Nick Brown
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. federal
agency tasked with restoring electricity to Puerto Rico, after Hurricane
Maria hit the Caribbean last year, is leaving the island though
thousands still have no power heading into the next hurricane season
starting next month.
Only a last-minute request from the governor of the island, bemoaning
the "fragile state" of the power grid, managed to keep most of the
generators brought by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) on
Puerto Rican soil for another six months.
The remaining generators might help keep the lights on for hospitals or
police stations if the island gets hit again during the coming hurricane
season, which begins June 1.
Hurricane Maria devastated Puerto Rico last September, leaving 1.5
million homes and businesses in the dark. Both the island's power
utility and the Trump Administration's Federal Emergency Management
Agency were criticized for a slow response.
Most power has been restored by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers but the
electricity grid remains unreliable, and suffered an island-wide
blackout last month.
(For a graphic on power restoration after hurricanes, click
https://tmsnrt.rs/2xvCFyU)
"The whole world is very nervous about hurricane time," said Rosalina
Abreu Gonzalez, who lives near Mariana, on the eastern side of the
island, where power has still not been restored. "There is a real
concern - the government hasn't provided an energy system that is more
secure."
The Army Corps, a unit of the U.S. armed forces, has said its task is
largely complete now that most people have power. About 22,000 customers
are still without electricity, most in remote areas, according to the
new head of the island's power utility, the Puerto Rico Electric Power
Authority.
"Our mission wasn't to build a modern resilient system," Charles
Alexander, Director of Contingency Operations and Homeland Security
Headquarters at the Army Corps, said at a Senate hearing last week.
On April 29, Governor Ricardo Rossello asked U.S. officials to leave
behind 850 generators at critical facilities, along with three larger
generators used to keep the grid stable. FEMA agreed to leave the
mega-generators and generators for 700 critical facilities.
Mega-generators supply 75 megawatts of power, enough to power 75,000
homes.
New PREPA Chief Executive Walter Higgins, who has only been on the job
for two months, said he is focusing on emergency procedures in the event
of another disaster in coming months.
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A resident of La Chorrera neighbourhood tries to fix an electrical
grid as the island's fragile power system is still reeling from the
devastation wrought by Hurricane Maria eight months ago, in Utuado,
Puerto Rico May 11, 2018. REUTERS/Alvin Baez
He said there is a plan for building a more resilient grid in the
future. Higgins took over from Ricardo Ramos, who resigned as CEO in
November after coming under fire for signing unvetted, little-known
contractors to restore power, rather than immediately ask for
assistance from other utilities.
"Unfortunately, pain causes learning, and what we’ve learned is how
to get mutual assistance called for and on the island immediately,"
Higgins told Reuters.
Still, PREPA's grid lacks buried power lines or reinforced poles,
common in other hurricane prone areas. The power utility ran up an
$8 billion debt over many years, largely due to poor bill
collection, causing the system to fall into disrepair.
"It is very hard to see these messages where the government is
saying we're ready for next season. We're not," said Sheylda Diaz, a
biology professor who lives near Utuado, in the island's center,
where some lines and poles have yet to be fixed.
The Army Corps will not provide further line restoration after
Friday, FEMA said.
"People here have no idea that they are leaving," said Abreu
Gonzalez, who runs a center where people without power can go for
meals.
Higgins said he sympathizes with those who want the Corps to remain.
"I can understand why somebody would want them to stay longer, as
long as there’s a single customer out."
Maria hit shortly after Hurricanes Harvey and Irma slammed the U.S.
mainland in 2017, but in both cases, power was largely restored
within a week.
"I cannot imagine a scenario where 20,000-plus Texans or 20,000
Floridians were without power and FEMA would make that decision,"
said Sen. Martin Heinrich, a Democrat from New Mexico. "I think
that's reprehensible."
(Reporting By Jessica Resnick-Ault; Editing by Diane Craft)
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