"Even Before Fiona, Puerto Rico’s Power Grid Was Poised For Failure"

"Widespread outages reveal flaws in electrical grid that has been slow to modernize".

"The hurricane winds that knocked out power to the entire island of Puerto Rico over the weekend encountered an electrical grid that experts liken to a house of cards: a fragile, decrepit, patchwork system running on old equipment that has failed to substantially modernize since the U.S. territory’s deadliest storm, Hurricane Maria, swept through five years before.

The state-run utility that is responsible for electricity generation is bankrupt, and mediation to restructure its $9 billion debt to bondholders ended without a deal last week. Luma Energy, the private consortium that was hired in 2020 to handle transmission, has failed to satisfy critics, as power outages have increased in duration this year even apart from destructive storms, according to a report last month by the Puerto Rico Energy Bureau.

And a major plan to modernize the island’s electricity system, funded with billions from the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency as a response to Hurricane Maria — which killed about 3,000 people and left some residents out of power for nearly a year — has been slow to get started."

Joshua Partlow and Arelis R. Hernández report for the Washington Post September 19, 2022.

SEE ALSO:

"Three Reasons Puerto Rico Is in the Dark" (New York Times)

 

Source: Washington Post, 09/20/2022