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  4. Human and Organizational Factors that Contributed to the US-Canadian August 2003 Electricity Grid Blackout
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Human and Organizational Factors that Contributed to the US-Canadian August 2003 Electricity Grid Blackout

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Description

The US-Canadian electricity grid is a network of providers and users that operate almost completely independently of one another. In August of 2003, First Energy’s (FE) Harding-Chamberlain transmission line near Akron, Ohio went offline starting a series of cascading failures that eventually led to 8 US states and 1 Canadian province totaling nearly 50 million people without power. The failure of transmission lines are common occurrences relating to the inability to exactly predict the electricity demand at any time (as will be discussed later in this document). The inability to properly monitor and react across multiple organizations to the downed line was the true failure that led to the blackout. This outage not only left homes and businesses without power but paralyzed critical public services such as transportation networks and hospitals. The estimated cost of the outage is between 4 and 6 billion US dollars.

Contributors
  • Chester, Mikhail Vin (Author)
  • Arizona State University. School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment (Contributor)
  • Arizona State University. Center for Earth Systems Engineering and Management (Contributor)
Topical Subject
  • Electric power failures
Geographic Subject
  • United States
Resource Type
Text
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Center for Earth Systems Engineering and Management
Identifier
Identifier Value
ASU-SSEBE-CESEM-2013-RPR-003
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Series
Research Project Report Series
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.18408
Collaborating institutions
School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment (SSEBE) / Center for Earth Systems Engineering and Management
System Created
  • 2013-09-02 04:16:49
System Modified
  • 2021-06-10 12:38:42
  •     
  • 1 year 9 months ago
Additional Formats
  • OAI Dublin Core
  • MODS XML

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