It is the height of a highly destructive hurricane season in the United States. The devastation of Harvey in Texas and Louisiana caused nearly 300,000 customers to lose electricity service, and Hurricane Irma has cut service to millions of people. Soon, winter storms will bring wind and snow to much of the country.
Anxious people everywhere worry about the impact these storms might have on their safety, comfort and convenience. Will they disrupt my commute to work? My children's ride to school? My electricity service?
When it comes to electricity, people turn their attention to the power lines overhead and wonder if their electricity service might be more secure if those lines were buried underground. But having studied this question for utilities and regulators, I can say the answer is not that straightforward. Burying power lines, also called undergrounding, is expensive, requires the involvement of many stakeholders and might not solve the problem at all.
Would burying power lines render them more weather-proof?
Read the full article on The Conversation.
(Score: 3, Informative) by driverless on Thursday September 14 2017, @06:01PM
+1. Most of our power lines (non-US country) are underground. I can't remember the last time we had an outage, it was between five and ten years ago. We don't pay more for power than I was paying in the US. So it's safer from disruption, a lot less ugly, no more expensive, and the power's more reliable than it was when I was in the US. Seems like a win all round.
As a more general comment, the power infrastructure in the US, at least in the place I've seen it, is closer to third-world than first-world. It's not so much a case of undergrounding it or not, it's getting it into a state where it's just basically fit for service, which currently it doesn't seem to be.