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crobriefing on Power Blackout Risks
Reliability of power supply varies significantly across regions (
Figure 4). Even within OECD
countries the quality of
supply is not uniform and power outages quite severly impact economy. The United States, as an example, has an
average of nine hours of disruptions each year for every consumer. Those interruptions
are estimated to result in
economical losses of least USD 150 bn each year. Compared to other industrialized countries the reliability of the
U.S. grid is 5-10 times less than in major European countries. The average electricity consumer in U.S. has to
cope with approx. 30 times more service interruptions each year than in Japan or Singapore. U.S.
grid stability
will decrease in the future if there are not enough investments in the infrastructure.
The October 2007 study, “2007 Long-Term Reliability Assessment,” of NERC (North American Electric Reliability
Corporation) came to the following conclusions:
8
•
Long-term capacity margins on the nation’s transmission systems are inadequate to protect these systems
from interruptions such as brownouts or blackouts.
Absent immediate investments, this condition will worsen
over
the next decade;
•
Projected increases in peak demand for electricity exceed projected additions of generation capacity;
•
The areas of greatest concern are California,
the Rocky Mountain states, New England, Texas,
the Southwest,
and the Midwest.
•
In total, the U.S. will require about 120 GW of new generation just to maintain the minimum 15 percent
capacity margin required for system reliability.
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