A huge swath of northern India was without power
Monday in the worst blackout in a decade. The cause of the failure of
India’s northern grid has yet to be determined. An estimated 400 million
people (about one-third of the population of India) in the states of
Delhi, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Punjab, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh,
Uttarakhand, and Jammu and Kashmir were affected. At its worst, the
outage made more than 8000 megawatts of electrical capacity unavailable.
As of 7 p.m. Indian local time, officials said 80 percent of the power
had been restored.
As lack of electricity cut power to millions of fans and air
conditioners, people suffered in the sweltering heat of the north Indian
summer. Long distance trains ground to a halt; the Metro underground
system in Delhi, the nation’s capital, was out of service; hospitals and
IT call centers were running on backup power; and drinking water
purification plants across northern India, which require hundreds of
megawatts to operate, were out of service.
Problems started at 2:35 a.m. local time when the northern grid failed
catastrophically somewhere near the city of Agra, home to the Taj Mahal,
according to power officials in New Delhi. Local power authorities
started diverting power from the eastern and western grid and from
places as far away as Bhutan, but there was still a huge shortfall.
Business leaders were furious. The Confederation of Indian Industry
(CII), the nation’s most influential business lobby, called for
immediate reforms in the power sector.
“The increasing gap between the Demand & Supply of Electricity has
been a matter for concern,” said CII director general Chandrajit
Banerjee in a statement. “CII
has consistently been highlighting that urgent steps need to be taken
for addressing key issues ailing the power sector, such as improving the
supply of coal for thermal power plants and reforming the state
distribution utilities. Today’s outage is an urgent reminder for
addressing these issues as a priority.”
Blackouts are a fact of life in India, which has struggled to meet
demand for electricity in recent years. However, system-wide failures of
the grid are relatively rare. The last major blackout of the northern
grid took place on 2 January 2001, when an estimated 230 million people
were affected for 16 hours. Poor and inadequate transmission equipment
was blamed for the failure in 2001.
India’s Cabinet Minister for Power, Sushil Kumar Shinde, has announced
an inquiry into the cause of today’s power failure. Shinde said at a
news conference that the frequencies at which northern grid typically
operates are between 48.5 and 50.2 hertz. At the time of the grid's
collapse, the frquency was 50.46 Hz, which could have caused or
contributed to the failure.
According to one electricity regulator, who spoke on condition of
anonymity, the cause of the collapse was that the grid became overloaded
as states drew more power than they were allotted.
According to PowerGrid Corporation of India,
power was restored first to railways, airports, and other essential
services by about 8 AM. The utility brought in electricity from both the
eastern and western grids and ramped up hydropower and thermal
generation in the north.
India has been struggling with electricity supply issues for some time. Harry Goldstein reported on attempts by Mumbai (part of India's western grid) to make itself blackout-proof in 2006. In 2010, contributing editor Seema Singh reported on how electricity policy was imperiling India's agricultural future.
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