Rotating outages in Rio Grande Valley
Consumers urged to conserve to reduce necessity for outages
5:05
pm, Oct. 8, 2014 – The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT)
has instructed Valley-area transmission
and distribution service providers to reduce demand on the electric
system immediately due to voltage concerns on the transmission system in
that area.
This situation is limited to the Rio Grande Valley area and does not affect other areas of the electric grid
serving most of Texas.
Rotating outages primarily affect residential neighborhoods and small businesses and do not typically include critical-need customers.
The outages are typically limited to 15-45 minutes before being rotated to a different neighborhood. Some customers may experience longer outages if power surges cause equipment failure during the restoration process. Customers can minimize the risk of power surges by turning off appliances, lights and other equipment, except for one task light to determine when power has been restored.
ERCOT is asking consumers in the Rio Grande Valley area to reduce energy consumption:
- Turn up thermostat a couple of degrees if possible.
- Turn off and unplug non-essential lights and appliances.
- Avoid running large appliances such as washers, dryers, and electric ovens during peak energy demand hours.
- Close shades and blinds at night to reduce the amount of heat lost through windows.
- Businesses should minimize the use of electric lighting and electricity-consuming equipment as much as possible.
- Large consumers of electricity should consider shutting down or reducing non-essential production processes.
Rotating outages will continue until voltage is stabilized.
*********** RECEIVED AT 7:55 PM*********
ERCOT discontinues rotating outages in Rio Grande Valley
7
p.m., Oct. 8, 2014 – The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT)
at 6:29 p.m. instructed transmission
and distribution service providers to restore electric service
following rotating outages in the Lower Rio Grande Valley. While most
affected consumers will be returned to service immediately, some
providers indicate it could take about an hour to restore
service to all affected consumers.
Earlier this evening, unplanned power plant outages resulted in electric transmission issues in the Valley,
which required action by the grid operator to protect the system in that area.
At
4:47 p.m., ERCOT instructed the transmission and distribution providers
to reduce system demand by 200 MW
to protect the Valley region from the risk of an uncontrolled blackout
situation. Additional power also was imported from the power grid in
Mexico to help address transmission system issues in the area, and ERCOT
is working with the affected generation owners
to return their units to service.
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