California is hit by MORE blackouts: Electricity is cut to more than 220,000 homes for the second night as the power grid buckles during the record-breaking heatwave and 13 wildfires
California was hit by more blackouts on Saturday as a heat wave baking the state in triple-digit temperatures continued to strain the electrical system.
Power is being brought back to 220,000 customers across the state after a brief outage, according to the authority that operates the power grid.
The California Independent System Operator (California ISO) said in a statement that the brief rolling blackouts throughout the state were caused by the failure of a power plant and the loss of wind power.
California ISO said it ordered the end of rolling blackouts about 6.48pm, when wind power increased.
California was hit by more blackouts on Saturday as a heat wave baking the state in triple-digit temperatures continued to strain the electrical system
Power is being brought back to 220,000 customers across the state after a brief outage, according to the authority that operates the power grid
California ISO ordered the first rolling outages in nearly 20 years on Friday when it directed utilities around the state to shed their power loads.
The state´s three biggest utilities - Pacific Gas & Electric, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas and Electric - turned off power to more than 410,000 homes and businesses for about an hour at a time until the emergency declaration ended 3 1/2 hours later.
The move came as temperatures around the state hit triple digits in many areas, and air conditioning use soared.
The power grid is mostly stressed during the late afternoon and early evening because of higher demand and solar energy production falling.
The state tried to prepare for the expected rise in electricity use by urging conservation and trying to buy more power. But a high-pressure system building over Western states meant there was less available.
A power outage caused a pump to fail at a wastewater treatment plant in Oakland, resulting in a sewer backup and the release of some 50,000 gallons of raw sewage into a waterway, the East Bay Municipal Utility District said.
People flocked to Windansea Beach in La Jolla during a record-setting heat wave that has covered much of the southwestern United States
Coastal cities such as San Francisco and Los Angeles sweltered in 86 and 98 degrees, respectively
The district said the outage began around 5pm Friday, more than an hour before the rolling outages occurred, and sewage began to spill early Saturday.
The agency said the sudden outage affected its ability to connect to backup power at the plant and during that time, workers were dealing with flooding while trying to restore power.
The agency warned boaters to stay away from the Oakland Estuary as it investigates the accident.
The state remained gripped by the heat wave Saturday, with several records either tied or broken, according to the National Weather Service.
The last time the state ordered rolling outages was during an energy crisis in 2001. Blackouts occurred several times from January to May, including one that affected more than 1.5 million customers.
The cause was a combination of energy shortages and market manipulation by energy wholesalers, infamously including Enron Corp., that drove up prices by withholding supplies.
A map of all the fires currently hitting the state and region
Counties up and down the state reported scattered outages, although the city of Los Angeles, which has its own power generating system, wasn´t affected.
The heat wave brought brutally high temperatures, increased wildfire danger and fears of coronavirus spread as people flock to beaches and parks for relief.
A thunderstorm rolling from the Central Coast to inland Southern California also brought dry lightning that sparked several small blazes, wind and flash flooding in the high desert.
Records were set in Lake Elsinore, where the mercury hit 114; Riverside at 109 and Gilroy at 108, according to the National Weather Service.
The high in Borrego Springs, in the desert northeast of San Diego, was 118. Coastal cities such as San Francisco and Los Angeles sweltered in 86 and 98 degrees, respectively.
Several cities opened cooling centers, but with limited capacity because of social distancing requirements.
San Francisco's Department of Emergency Management issued simultaneous tweets urging residents to prepare for power outages and to protect themselves from the coronavirus during the heat wave.
'Stay home when possible. If it feels too hot indoors, seek cooler temps outside, keep physical distance, wear a face covering,' the department tweeted.
Hundreds of thousands of Californians were plunged into darkness during a heatwave on Friday evening as companies cut power to homes after the state's Independent System Operator declared a Stage 3 energy emergency. The sun is seen setting in Asuza
The blackout was underway Friday as most of the state was issued Stage 3 emergency
California's Independent System Operator worried that a high-demand for power would overwhelm the system. Their emergency announcement forced energy companies to shut off power to hundreds of thousands of homes
Cities and towns across the state were affected by the rolling shutoffs. Homes as far north as San Fransciso were plunged into darkness. Meanwhile, residents in San Diego - at the southernmost point of California - also had their power cut
The scorching temperatures are a concern for firefighters battling blazes that have destroyed several homes and erupted near rural and urban foothill neighborhoods, driving through tinder-dry brush.
In addition to the possibility of heat stroke and other hot-weather illnesses, health officers were concerned that people will pack beaches, lakes and other recreation areas without following mask and social distancing orders - a major concern in the state that has seen more than 613,000 coronavirus cases.
Israel saw a COVID-19 resurgence after a May heat wave inspired school officials to let children remove their masks, Dr. George Rutherford, an epidemiologist at the University of California, San Francisco, told the San Francisco Chronicle.
'People will want to take off their masks when it´s hot,' Rutherford said. 'Don´t do it.'
There are also currently 13 wildfires raging across the state, with the hot weather causing catastrophic conditions for firefighters. Pictured: a brush fire in the Lake Hughes area of the Angeles National Forest
Firefighters works to douse flames from the Lake Fire in the Angeles National Forest on Friday
California is hit by MORE blackouts: Electricity is cut to more than 220,000 homes for the second night as the power grid buckles during the record-breaking heatwave and 13 wildfires
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August 16, 2020
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