KUB looks for cause of outage

By Knoxville News-Sentinel


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The power was back on downtown, but KUB workers were searching for the source of an underground power cable failure that left about 850 customers without electricity for 11 hours.

Knoxville Utilities Board Engineering Manager Gabriel Bolas said workers took down a transformer for scheduled maintenance the morning of April 6, then at 10 p.m. an underground electric cable that was serving as a backup while this was taking place failed. KUB employees had to get a working transformer back in place in order to restore power, which they did by 9 a.m. the next day, Bolas said.

Now, workers must find the spot where the failure occurred and repair it. The failure of an underground power cable is a rare occurrence for KUB, he said.

"We will stay on rotating shifts until we find it and get it replaced," Bolas said.

"These cables are very reliable and can last for 75 to 100 years," Bolas added. "We have very, very few cables like this that have failed, but since they are underground we have to go looking for problems. Tracking it down is the trade-off."

The outage seemed to especially affect power users in the Gay Street and Summit Hill Drive area, including the Crowne Plaza hotel, the Sterchi Building, the Commerce Building and the Emporium.

Ken Knight, general manager of the Crowne Plaza, said the hotel had to give refunds to a number of guests who did not have electricity in their rooms, and some events at the hotel were canceled when power was still not available at 8:30 a.m. April 7.

"We actually had two events that totaled 400 people that were both canceled," Knight said.

The outage primarily affected customers in the 37902 ZIP code area, which includes downtown, said KUB spokesman Jason Meridieth.

Bolas said the city's underground electric power system "is built as a spiderweb of cable, interconnected so that everywhere there is more than one source of power."

The KUB procedure for maintaining the underground electric system includes annual inspections of all accessible parts, such as transformers, manholes and vaults, but Bolas said there is no way to inspect the underground cables themselves. Most of the system was installed in the 1950s through 1970s, but some cable dates back to the 1920s.

KUB will not likely change any of its maintenance procedures because of the outage but will continue an ongoing program of replacing underground cable downtown, Bolus said.

"I can tell you that since 2007 we have spent $4 million replacing cable and we will continue doing that," he said.

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Key Points

A proposed $7.25B stimulus for DOE's EM to accelerate nuclear cleanup, modernize infrastructure, and create jobs.

✅ $7.25B one-time stimulus for DOE EM cleanup and infrastructure.

✅ Targets Savannah River Site; supports jobs and small businesses.

✅ Builds on ARRA 2009; accelerates nuclear waste remediation.

 

A bloc of local governments and nuclear industry, nuclear innovation efforts, labor and community groups are pressing Congress to provide a one-time multibillion-dollar boost to the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Environmental Management, the remediation-focused Savannah River Site landlord.

The organizations and officials -- including Citizens For Nuclear Technology Awareness Executive Director Jim Marra and Savannah River Site Community Reuse Organization President and CEO Rick McLeod -- sent a letter Friday to U.S. House and Senate leadership "strongly" supporting a $7.25 billion funding injection, even as ACORE challenges coal and nuclear subsidies in separate regulatory proceedings, arguing it "will help reignite the national economy," help revive small businesses and create thousands of new jobs despite the novel coronavirus crisis.

More than 30 million Americans have filed unemployment claims in the past two months, with additional clean energy job losses reported, too. Hundreds of thousands of claims have been filed in South Carolina since mid-March, compounding issues like unpaid utility bills in neighboring states.

The requested money could, too, speed Environmental Management's nuclear waste cleanup missions and be used to fix ailing infrastructure and strengthen energy security for rural communities nationwide -- some of which dates back to the Cold War -- at sites across the country. That's a "rare" opportunity, reads the letter, which prominently features the Energy Communities Alliance logo and its chairman's signature.

Similar funding programs, like what was done with the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act and recent clean energy funding initiatives, have been successful.

At the time, amid a staggering economic downturn nationwide, Environmental Management contractors "hired over 20,000 new workers," putting them "to work to reduce the overall cleanup complex footprint by 688 square miles while strengthening local economies," the Friday letter reads.

The Energy Department's cleanup office estimates the $6 billion investment years ago reduced its environmental liability by $13 billion, according to a 2012 report.

Such a leap forward, the coalition believes, is repeatable, a view reflected in current plans to revitalize coal communities with clean energy projects across the country.

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TransLink's Metro Vancouver program deploying charging, zero-emission buses on Route 100 to cut emissions and fuel costs.

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#google#

That decision triggered widespread controversy and protests by local residents, environmental groups and lawmakers, echoing enforcement disputes such as renewable energy pollution cases reported in Maryland.

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