Florida prepares to lose power — again

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Oct 09, 2024 View in browser
 
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By Arianna Skibell

Past storm debris is piled up in Treasure Island, Florida.

Past storm debris is piled up in Treasure Island, Florida, as residents prepare for Hurricane Milton's arrival. | Spencer Platt/AFP via Getty Images

Utility workers just finished restoring power to barrier islands in Florida by rebuilding infrastructure destroyed in Hurricane Helene.

Now they’re preparing to do it all over again, write Shelby Webb and Peter Behr.

Hurricane Milton is expected to make landfall on Florida’s west coast as soon as tonight, bringing maximum sustained winds of nearly 120 mph and up to 13 feet of storm surge. Tropical storm-force winds, heavy rains and tornado warnings are already spreading across the state.

Florida has worked hard over the past 20 years to insulate its power lines, substations, transformers and other electric infrastructure from hurricane damage. The state’s use of self-healing technologies that can reroute electricity away from damaged lines – along with other innovations – has made it a national model for resilience and repairs.

Still, officials say Milton’s impact on the grid could be catastrophic — underscoring the cost of more frequent and intense climate-fueled disasters.

“The challenge we run into is there’s really no way to completely isolate electricity infrastructure from interaction with the environment,” Ted Kury, director of energy studies for the Public Utility Research Center at the University of Florida, told Shelby and Pete.

“Aboveground lines are more susceptible to wind events — flying debris and falling trees — and underground infrastructure runs the risk of water incursion,” he said.

Preparation: A force of 36,000 utility line workers from around the country and Canada began traveling to Florida on Tuesday. Many of those crews are pivoting from grid restoration in the Carolinas and Georgia, where more than 120,000 customers remain without power from Helene, which killed at least 230 people.

Tampa Electric, which provides power to roughly 840,000 homes and businesses around Tampa Bay, has also mobilized more than 4,500 utility workers from as far as Texas and Minnesota to help with restoration efforts after Milton, a spokesperson said.

Electric utility providers up and down Florida’s west coast told customers they are likely to be without power for days (which may well be an understatement). The National Weather Service’s hurricane statement for a swath of coast including Tampa Bay warned that certain locations “may be uninhabitable for weeks or months.” Tampa Electric said people reliant on electricity for health needs should secure backup power generation.

Uncertainty remains about where exactly Milton will strike land, and forecasters said dangerous wind, rain, surge and flooding could range far from the storm’s center. Hurricane and storm surge warnings blanketed most of Florida’s west coast and much of its Atlantic shoreline. And utilities much further inland were bracing for impact.

“While it is difficult to predict the full extent, multi-day outages are anticipated, and flooding is a concern,” the Orlando Utilities Commission said Tuesday in a news release. The electricity and water provider said it was “increasing restoration resources to five times the normal size to respond to outages caused by the storm.”

 

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Power Centers

Heavy rains from hurricane Helene caused record flooding and damage on September 28, 2024 in Asheville, North Carolina.

Heavy rains from hurricane Helene caused record flooding and damage on September 28, 2024 in Asheville, North Carolina. | Melissa Sue Gerrits/AFP via Getty Images

Milton could make IV fluid shortage worse
The Biden administration is rushing to evacuate bags of intravenous fluids from a Florida distribution center in an attempt to insulate the nation’s supply chain from yet another monster storm, writes Ariel Wittenberg.

Hospitals across the country are already treating patients without their usual allocation of IV fluids after Hurricane Helene damaged the factory that supplies 60 percent of the nation’s supply. That has forced some hospitals to postpone surgeries and others to rely on Gatorade to rehydrate patients.

Can Florida’s insurance market take the hit?
The expected billions in damage from Hurricane Milton could also wreck Florida’s still fragile insurance market, potentially disrupting the state’s economy, writes Gary Fineout.

The storm-prone state has been reeling from insurance problems for decades, including spiking premiums for homeowners and insurers retreating completely from the state. Despite some fixes that lawmakers and the industry hoped would stabilize the market, a major storm hitting a heavily populated area could erase progress and send the market into a tailspin.

How Harris, Trump could mold the courts
Both Donald Trump and Kamala Harris will seek to make a big impact on the federal judiciary if they are elected president this fall. Pivotal to their efforts will be who runs the Senate, writes Pamela King.

“The composition of the Senate is going to have a huge impact — no matter who wins — on who can get appointed,” said John Collins, an associate law professor at George Washington University.

In Other News

Fossil fuel influence: Fossil fuel interests are working to kill solar in one Ohio county. The hometown newspaper is helping.

Uncharted territory: Why Hurricane Milton is a sign of the new abnormal.

'Overshoot' is overshot: Scientists have said that we can cool the planet back down. Now they’re not so sure.

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Work crews clear debris leftover from Hurricane Helene in Clearwater Beach, Fla.

Work crews clear debris leftover from Hurricane Helene in Clearwater Beach, Florida. | Chris O'Meara/AP

Florida was taking unprecedented steps to clear streets and parks of appliances, furniture, splintered houses and tree limbs — objects officials fear will become lethal or damaging missiles.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said Milton will prove deadly. “There will be fatalities,” he said. “I don’t see a way around it when the storm surge is 10 feet.”

Hundreds of roads remain closed in western North Carolina, including a major cross-country truck route, nearly two weeks after Hurricane Helene touched off a string of floods and landslides.

That's it for today, folks! Thanks for reading, and stay safe out there.

 

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Arianna Skibell @ariannaskibell

 

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