Power Play: A More Reliable U.S. Electric System; U.S. Utilities Have a Lot to Learn About Avoiding Power Outages. They Can Benefit from the Experience of Foreign Utilities, Other U.S. Industries, And Even Their Own Nuclear Power Plants (Industry Overview)
Issues in Science and Technology 2006, Summer, 22, 4
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- 79,00 Kč
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- 79,00 Kč
Publisher Description
The United States ranks toward the bottom among developed nations in terms of the reliability of its electricity service. Catastrophic events, such as the August 14, 2003, blackout that put 50 million people in the dark, are well known, but that is only the most visible evidence of a problem that is pervasive in the U.S. electric system. Frequent small outages are endemic throughout the country. Although these might seem to be relatively minor inconveniences to homeowners, they can create serious problems for businesses. (See sidebar, "The Effects of Power Outages"). Other countries demonstrate that much greater reliability is achievable, and the U.S. nuclear power industry has demonstrated over the past three decades how vast improvements can be made in the United States. The average U.S. customer loses power for 214 minutes per year. That compares to 70 in the United Kingdom, 53 in France, 29 in the Netherlands, 6 in Japan, and 2 minutes per year in Singapore. These outage durations tell only part of the story. In Japan, the average customer loses power once every 20 years. In the United States, it is once every 9 months, excluding hurricanes and other strong storms.