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Old 28-01-2015, 03:26 PM   #42
lisaishername
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Default Re: $700-a-year increase running an airconditioner & snap price rises of as much as 15,000 %

Quote:
Originally Posted by poppa smurf View Post
you're talking about the old rolling blackouts......would not be tolerated nor allowed in this day and age.......Certainly with no benefit to consumer or reason behind it.
http://www.theguardian.com/environme...ires-melbourne

Quote:
On Wednesday, the Victorian premier Denis Napthine, who has introduced an effective ban on the construction of wind turbines, talked about the need to "reduce the supply to some households".
He's talking about cutting the electricity to homes, during the hottest part of the day.
"The government is insisting that priority is given to electricity supplies for hospitals, nursing homes emergency services, public transport and major infrastructure," he said in a radio interview, and he also noted that essential services "will be exempt" from power cuts.
The blackouts were exacerbated by repair delays at one of Victoria's major power stations and problems with the Basslink power cable from Tasmania.
Either these reasons are needed before they will initiate rolling blackouts or we have an economic collapse and nobody is able to pay the bills.

Will not be tolerated? Of course there would have to be a reason behind cutting off the power. Melting high voltage lines. etc

http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/su...206-325e0.html

Quote:
"The main cause of network faults during hot conditions is overloading," Citipower and Powercor spokesman Lyall Johnson said.
He said most customer outages were caused by high and low voltages, fuse failures and transformer failures.
"We encourage customers to monitor their usage of electricity in periods of extremely hot weather and, where possible, reduce their usage," he said.
Stuart Allott from distributor United Energy (supplying south-eastern suburbs to the Mornington Peninsula) said 45 of approximately 20,000 street-level low-voltage circuits failed during the heatwave.
"Prolonged heat can cause our transformers to be unbalanced or overloaded due to customer load increasing as a result of high air-conditioner use, and we only truly know what peak load they can take when we get a set of very hot days in a row," Mr Allott said.
He gave the example of McKinnon, in Melbourne's south-east, as an area that had blackouts. A "peak demand issue" was identified in a small area of the suburb and works were fast-tracked to improve supply reliability, he said.
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