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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, October 18, 2006

HECO blames 3rd turbine crash for O'ahu's blackout

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By Rick Daysog
Advertiser Staff Writer

HECO RESPONDS TO READERS' QUESTIONS

HECO answered questions yesterday that consumers posted to honoluluadvertiser.com, including:

  • When did HECO restore all power?

    It restored power to all of its customers by 8 p.m. Monday. Most of the company's customers saw their power come back by 10 p.m. Sunday.

  • Why couldn't HECO employ rolling blackouts as an alternative to shutting down the entire island?

    Rolling blackouts are typically used when a utility knows in advance that it won't be able to supply enough electricity to meet demand and manually cuts off certain users according to a predetermined schedule.

    Sunday's blackout occurred when HECO's system suffered an unanticipated 25 percent drop in capacity, triggering its automatic shutdown mechanism.

  • Will HECO pay for damage the blackout caused to computers and appliances?

    HECO has started taking claims from residents who were harmed by the outage. Customers must file their claims within 30 days and can obtain claim forms by calling 543-4624. The claims are subject to review, and awards will be made on a case-by-case basis.

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    Hawaiian Electric Co. had enough excess power to keep O'ahu lit after earthquakes caused two generators to fail Sunday morning, but when a third, much larger, turbine crashed minutes later, it took the entire island with it.

    "If only two units went down, we wouldn't be having this conversation," said HECO spokesman Jose Dizon last night. "The system would have stayed up."

    HECO is investigating the cause of the blackout, which left most of O'ahu without power for more than 12 hours Sunday.

    O'ahu residents have questioned why the failure of two generators — which only supply 12 percent of the island's electrical needs — could cause the entire system to crash. The two turbines — a 90-megawatt turbine at Kahe Point and a 55-megawatt unit at Aloha Tower — went down at 7:09 a.m. Sunday, or about two minutes after the first earthquake.

    HECO said yesterday that its power reserves are typically equivalent to about 15 percent of its total capacity. Had the earthquake only caused the two generators to go offline, the excess capacity would have been enough to keep O'ahu running.

    SYSTEM OVERWHELMED

    The failure of the third generator — a 142-megawatt unit at the Kahe Point power plant — meant that about 25 percent of the power supply was lost. That overwhelmed the system, triggering the automatic shutdown of electricity to HECO's 291,000 O'ahu customers, Dizon said.

    The third generator shut down three minutes after the first two at 7:12 a.m. Sunday because of shaking from the first earthquake, a 6.7-magnitude temblor off the coast of the Big Island.

    HECO has begun an internal investigation into the blackout.

    The state Public Utilities Commission will begin questioning HECO officials in the next few days over the causes of the outage. State lawmakers are calling for a full investigation by the PUC that could result in fines and penalties should HECO be found at fault.

    LONGER BLACKOUT

    HECO officials said the shutdown of the islandwide system was necessary once the third generator came down to avoid permanent damage to the operating generators. If one of the other generators had been damaged, it could have led to blackouts lasting days or weeks and not hours.

    "It could easily take months" to repair a damaged generator, said Dan Williamson, HECO president from 1990 to 1995. "They would have to get (a new generator) from a Mainland manufacturer or borrow one from another utility on the Mainland and would have to have it dismantled and reconfigured for use here."

    Reach Rick Daysog at rdaysog@honoluluadvertiser.com.

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