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September 2003

Vol. 8, No. 36 Week of September 07, 2003

Exec: Poor coordination spurred Aug. 14 blackout

H. JOSEF HEBERT, Associated Press Writer

Associated Press reporters Malia Rulon in Was

A breakdown in communication and cooperation among Midwest utilities contributed significantly to the worst power blackout in U.S. history, a utility executive has told congressional investigators.

Government and industry officials, testifying at congressional hearings that begin Sept. 3, will say it's too early to pinpoint the cause of the Aug. 14 blackout that cascaded from Ohio through Michigan and into Canada, then engulfed New York state.

But the governors of Ohio and Michigan will join the call for Congress to enact new federal electricity grid reliability standards, replacing the voluntary standards that most now agree are inadequate. In a letter to House investigators, the chief executive of a major Michigan utility says he is convinced that a power plant shutdown and transmission line failures in Ohio “were the triggering event for the blackout” and that an “apparent failure in communication” was a major reason the problem spread.

“For some reason, the required level of communications and coordination failed on Aug. 14,” Anthony Earley Jr., chairman and chief executive officer of DTE Energy, wrote the House Energy and Commerce Committee. He said this “apparent breakdown in communications between the Ohio utilities and other utility systems” must be dealt with.

Detroit Edison didn't get warnings

Earley, whose Detroit Edison serves 5 million people in southeastern Michigan, complained that “Michigan utilities did not have timely or adequate warnings about deteriorating systems condition in Ohio” during the hour before the blackout.

He said Detroit Edison did not begin to detect anything unusual until 4:06 p.m., five minutes before the blackout hit full force in all or parts of eight states. Investigators said the first of five transmission line failures in Ohio began occurring an hour earlier.

In a separate letter to House investigators, FirstEnergy Corp., the Ohio-based company whose generating plant and transmission line failures have been at the center of the blackout investigation, dismissed the notion that a single event triggered the blackout.

“The events of the day ... involved thousands of separate and discrete incidents across a widespread multi-system region,” H. Peter Burg, FirstEnergy's chairman and chief executive, wrote the committee.

FirstEnergy: no single straw

In a presentation Sept. 2 to financial analysts in New York, FirstEnergy's chief financial officer, Richard Marsh, said, “There is probably no single straw that broke the camel's back. We think what happened is a combination of events, not an isolated event on anybody's line or any one operator.”

Executives of the International Transmission Co., which operates transmission lines in Michigan, also have complained that their engineers did not receive even a courtesy call from Ohio utility officials about their line problems prior to the blackout.

When ITC found out about the problems on the Ohio lines, “it was at the point of no return” and too late to act, Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm will tell the lawmakers. She says in prepared remarks that had Michigan grid operators been warned, “they might have been able to craft a contingency plan ... and avoid the cascading failures.”

The grid's reliability should not depend on a courtesy call, Ohio Gov. Bob Taft says in his testimony. “Frankly,” his text says, “in the 21st century a system that relies on courtesy calls is clearly outdated and must be modernized.”

Congress concerned about shortcomings in system

The hearing Sept. 3 by the House Energy and Commerce Committee is the first congressional inquiry into the blackout, which has spawned renewed interest in Congress to act to increase the reliability of the country's aging power transmission systems.

“We're very concerned that there are shortcomings in the system. The grid is designed to handle multiple disturbances without going down. But clearly for whatever reason the system failed this time,” said Ken Johnson, a committee spokesman.

Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham, co-chairman of a U.S.-Canada task force investigating the blackout and the leadoff witness at the hearing, will reiterate his recommendation for Congress to enact mandatory reliability standards to be enforced by the government.

Taft and Granholm will support such standards, as will Pat Wood, chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. “Currently there is no direct federal authority or responsibility for the reliability of the transmission grid,” Wood says in testimony prepared for the hearing.

“The electrical system in this country must include a system of accountability. We need to know who is responsible for what,” says Granholm.

Rep. Billy Tauzin, R-La., the committee's chairman, has said he hopes to have a broad range of electricity proposals as part of a broader energy bill ready for approval by the end of the month.

Some Democrats want to avoid getting the electricity measures entangled with other, controversial energy issues such as whether to drill for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., said Sept. 2 he will introduce separate legislation this week that would require the electricity industry to comply with mandatory transmission standards. But Tauzin wants to include the new requirements as part of a broader package of electricity provisions to be passed as part of comprehensive energy legislation. Therefore, he and other Republicans will oppose Dingell's bill.





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