Temperatures drop pushing power usage up


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TVA Winter Peak Demand surged near 31,400 megawatts amid 18°F cold, with stable generation, limited outages, and coordinated KUB restoration across Chattanooga, Knoxville, Nashville, Memphis, and Huntsville, ensuring grid reliability during morning load spikes.

 

The Core Facts

The seasonal maximum load for TVA, recently near 31,400 MW, met with stable generation and minimal customer outages.

  • Morning demand peaked near 31,400 MW; around 29,900 MW at 8 a.m.
  • Average temperature was about 18°F across the TVA region.
  • Generation remained stable; KUB reported only scattered outages.
  • Prior winter peaks: ~31,100 MW (Jan 5) and ~31,300 MW (Jan 6).
  • Records: 32,572 MW winter (2009); 33,482 MW summer (2007).

 

A winter storm that moved through the Knoxville area recently may have canceled school, closed offices and caused other inconveniences, but it did not result in major problems for utilities.

 

TVA reported December 13 that its peak load in the morning was about 29,900 megawatts at around 8 o'clock. At that time, demand peaked at around 31,400 megawatts during the morning hours, similar to near-record demand on four U.S. grids observed recently across the Northeast and Midwest.

TVA spokesman Mike Bradley said the average temperature across the federal utility's service area Chattanooga, Huntsville, Knoxville, Memphis, Nashville in the morning was about 18 degrees Fahrenheit.

Bradley described TVA's current power production as stable.

He said the last time winter demand reached 31,000 megawatts was in the first week of January, when peak demand exceeded 31,000 megawatts twice, on January 5 at about 31,100 megawatts and January 6 at about 31,300 megawatts.

According to TVA, the all-time record winter demand was set on January 16, 2009, at 32,572 megawatts when temperatures across the Tennessee Valley region averaged 9 degrees. The all-time record demand on the TVA power system was 33,482 megawatts on August 16, 2007, when temperatures averaged 102 degrees, similar to rolling blackouts in Texas during extreme heat.

KUB spokeswoman Grace McNeilly said the snowfall and cold temperatures have caused few problems for electricity customers, and rising utility costs remain a concern for many households today.

"We were fortunate," McNeilly said, saying there have been scattered power outages throughout the KUB service area but nothing widespread. "The snow was light and powdery in texture. It was not as wet, which can weigh down power lines and cause outages. Also, the winds, which can cause power outages as well, weren't as high."

According to KUB outage investigation updates, 397 KUB customers reported a power outage and 377 reported outages December 13. The utility, which serves Knox and parts of seven surrounding counties, has about 200,000 electric customers.

McNeilly said KUB has been making preparations for winter weather and power outages that may occur, including crews to put on standby when a storm occurs, a system to categorize outages to restore power to the largest number of customers in the fastest time, and the use of contracted staff in the event of widespread power outages.

"We'll work to restore as quickly as we can the highest number of power customers as possible," McNeilly said.

 

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