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Safety - Critters Awire
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Animal interference with
electric power facilities account for 12 percent of all electricity outages,
according to Richard Harness, a wildlife biologist with EDM International, a
utility consulting firm in Fort Collins, Colo. Weather causes 67 percent of
outages.
Utilities can prevent, or at least reduce, animal-caused
outages. Unlike outages caused by severe weather, outages caused by animal
interference generally occur in isolated locations and the public cannot see
the cause. This often leads to anger and frustration among customers.
Today, utilities are focusing on increased reliability. Fifteen
years ago, homes werent filled with computers, |
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digital clocks,
digital stoves, and sensitive, programmable electronic entertainment
equipment, said Bob Hartman, general manager of Kaddas Enterprises of
Salt Lake City, a manufacturer of devices to reduce animal-related outages.
Now, if the power goes out, homeowners have to go through their homes and
reprogram everything. The cost of re-fusing a transformer may only be $300, but
the cost of an outage is a lot greater in terms of consumer
anger."
We began looking hard at reliability improvement in 2000,
as a result of a high number of outages in 1999, said Bill Ewer, customer
services and marketing manager of Longmont Power & Communications in
Colorado.We adopted a reliability improvement plan in 2001 and set some
goals, as well as some specific measures to improve reliability. Many of
these focused on reducing animal outages.
Squirrels are the third
leading cause of power outages in the United States, after direct storm damage
and tree damage, according to Douglas Wulff, marketing director for Critter
Guard, Inc., Columbia, Mo. |
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 Longmont
Power & Communications has reduced squirrel-related outages since stepping
up its tree-trimming program in 2000, said Bill Ewer, customer services &
marketing manager. Photo courtesy Longmont Power &
Communications. |
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In one report on
outages, the Electric Power Research Institute referred to squirrels as
Public Enemy Number One for utilities.
Squirrels, raccoons
and birds are the three leading causes of outages for Colorado Springs
Utilities, said Kirsta Scherff-Norris, a wildlife biologist with the utility.
Longmonts Ewer said animals, chiefly squirrels, account for 38 percent of
the utilitys outages.
For Wayne Daniel, manager of the electric
department at Tullahoma Utilities Board in Tennessee, squirrels are an even
more serious problem. Animals cause about 60 percent of our outages, and
most of those are squirrels, he said. We also have what seems to be
a rare problem. Squirrels in the Tullahoma area eat our aluminum
connectors. At first, Daniel thought they were just sharpening their
teeth, but there are never any shavings or chips anywhere. They actually
eat the aluminum, he said. EPRI is studying this phenomenon to find out
why.
To reduce animal-related outages, utilities need to develop
strategies for living in harmony with the critters. Protecting animals is a
corporate philosophy for Sumter Electric Cooperative in Florida.
We have always believed you can run a utility and have it operate in
harmony with nature, said Barry Bowman, director of public affairs.
We dont like outages, and we dont like to see wildlife
injured. The utilitys monthly customer newsletter always has an
educational article on wildlife. The articles are designed to help make
the public aware of animals and the environment, said Bowman. If the
utility is constructing a new substation, it engages wildlife biologists to
relocate any gopher tortoises that might inhabit the area.
Underground
distribution lines reduce the incidence of animal-caused outages. Only
about 32 percent of our distribution lines are overhead, said Colorado
Springss Scherff-Norris. The rest are underground, and about 95
percent of our new lines are also going in underground.
An
aggressive tree-trimming program can also reduce animal-caused outages. This is
a major component of Longmont Powers overall program to improve
reliability. Trees can be a direct cause of outages, around 11 percent
for us, said Ewer. In addition, they can also make it easier for
squirrels to jump to the lines. Three years ago, the utility implemented
an aggressive five-year tree-trimming program, where 20 percent of trees along
the lines are trimmed each year. To accomplish this, the utility increased its
tree-trimming budget from $120,000 to $180,000 a year. Before, we focused
on trimming trees just where specific problems existed, said Ewer.
Now, we are doing systematic trimming, focusing on the main feeder
areas. By doing a better job of trimming trees, the utility is starting
to see reductions in direct tree-related outages and squirrel-related
outages.
Another strategy is to make it difficult for squirrels and
other animals to climb poles to get to power lines. One option here is steel
poles. They make it more difficult for animals to climb poles, said
Richard F. Aichinger, PE, manager of engineering, utility products, for Valmont
Industries, Valley, Neb., a steel pole manufacturer. Squirrels can still
get to your lines from trees, but the problem there would be lack of proper
tree-trimming.
Squirrel access to power lines is reduced when
utilities band wooden poles with slippery hard sheets of plastic, called
animals slides or pole bands.
We use hard
plastic bands about 30 inches wide, wrapped around the poles about half-way
up, said Longmonts Ewer. The utility installed 1,700 bands in the
last two years, and they have been very effective in preventing climbing
animals from getting up poles, he said.
Critter Guard sells pole guards
and line guards that keep squirrels from gaining access to equipment. Most
utilities use the product only on their more expensive equipment, such as
reclosers and pole-top switches, said Wulff. The guards are not cost-effective
for transformer protection, but are for substation protection. Some of
our clients have purchased over 3,000 of our line guards to do all of the
overhead getaways coming into their substations, he
said.
Utilities can also discourage squirrel exploration by covering
electrical equipment on poles. If you want to prevent animal-caused
outages in above-ground distribution systems, you can install covers for fuse
disconnects, transformer bushings, recloser bushings, breaker bushings,
lightning arrestors, and so on, said Kaddass Hartman. The company
also designs and builds products for unique situations.
EDMs
Harness sees value in this approach. If youre having problems with
animal-related outages, you should change your construction standards for new
installations, he said. For example, if squirrels are a problem, he
recommends purchasing transformers with wildlife caps already installed, so
squirrels cannot reach up from a transformer and grab the top of the bushing or
energized wire and complete the circuit. In addition, when installing a jumper
to a transformer, Harness recommends using insulated or covered wires.
Sumter Electric installs squirrel guards on transformers near large
squirrel populations. They arent very expensive, and they can be
installed very quickly, said Bowman.
We are installing fuse
cut-out covers, transformer bushing covers, ceramic cap covers, and some other
products, said Longmont Powers Ewer.
Quality and durability
are important when purchasing products designed to reduce animal-related
outages, Hartman said. Some products are inexpensive, but they may not
last very long, he said. Most of the cost involved in the protection is
for installation labor. You will lose money if you constantly have to
replace damaged or broken products, he said.
The effectiveness of
these strategies for discouraging squirrel interference with power facilities
varies. Hartman of Kaddas Enterprises stays in touch with utilities that have
installed the companys products. We have not been made aware of any
cases where they have had problems with animal interactions after installing
our products, he said. In other words, they are virtually 100
percent effective. If squirrels are a problem, though, you may need to invest
in a lot of products and labor. You have to do all of the jumpers or stingers,
and all of the exposed metal parts.
Longmont Powers comprehensive
program has been working. In 2001, the utility experienced 458 outages,
including 155 caused by animals or birds. In 2003, that number dropped to 320
outages, only 73 caused by animals or birds.
Tullahoma has not had
great success with its installations of wildlife protectors, which are round
disks that slide over insulators. We have installed these around the
bushings on the transformers, so animals cant go from ground to
hot, said Daniel. The utility purchased 3,300 protectors over the last
five years for about $35,000. They have helped, but just a bit, he
said. In 1997, the utility had 148 squirrel-related outages. The number had
decreased only to 136 by 2002. Daniel said better tree-trimming practices, not
animal-guard equipment, led to the reduction. There are cases where we
have had six or seven of these disks on one pole, but the squirrels have still
managed to trip the line out, he said
The continuing problems
leave Daniel with a new perspective on squirrels. Before I got into the
utility business, I used to like squirrels, he said. In fact, I was
on an Air Force base for 37 years and used to feed them. I wouldnt do
that anymore, though. |
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