Blackout shows need for power plant
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Monday’s power outage would not have been so extensive for Glendale
and Burbank had a new Magnolia Power Plant been up and running, power
officials said.
Although the outage lasted less than two hours and originated in
Los Angeles, it still showed the effects of the delay in getting the
$230-million state-of-the-art plant commercially operational, Burbank
Water and Power General Manager Ron Davis said.
“The impact would have been a lot less,” Glendale Electrical
Services Administrator Ramon Abueg said. “We still would have seen
some loss but not as extensive.”
The Magnolia Power Plant is a joint project between Burbank,
Glendale, Pasadena, Anaheim, Cerritos, Colton and the Southern
California Public Power Authority to provide reliable and cleaner
power to residents.
The facility, with its blue, soaring 150-foot exhaust stack,
employs a combined cycle technology in which heat produced by one
turbine is used to power a second generator, increasing the plant’s
efficiency.
The Magnolia plant would have carried the power load the city
needed to keep operating, Davis said.
“The operators of the system in Burbank and Glendale would have
had to collaborate to isolate it quickly from the Los Angeles grid
and then balance the load,” he said.
The 310-megawatt natural gas-fired plant is set to go online for
commercial use on Sept. 22, more than three months after it was
dedicated, to much fanfare by the leaders of the six cities that will
receive its power.
Monday’s power outage hit nearly 2 million people in Los Angeles
and the San Fernando Valley, including Burbank and Glendale. A Los
Angeles Department of Water and Power employee accidentally cut wires
at a receiving station in North Hollywood causing of the outage.
Glendale had three of its eight generators working at the time of
the outage, which is why the entire city did not lose power, Abueg
said.
“We had to match generation with the load,” Abueg said. “We have
to match those two to keep the lights on.”
Burbank was using 170 megawatts of power at the time of the
outage. Two city-owned generators contributed 69 megawatts with the
balance coming from outside sources delivered to the city through the
receiving station where the outage originated and from Glendale,
Burbank Water and Power Assistant General Manager Greg Simay said.
Had the Magnolia plant been operating, the city would not have
been importing power from outside sources, Simay said.
“That power would have allowed us to avoid an outage,” Simay said.
As the first utility to use the new General Electric Co.-made
turbine, the department is having to work out the bugs and deal with
a troublesome turning gear that wasn’t meshing with gears on the
steam turbine.
GE has been providing substitute turning gear assemblies
free-of-charge to keep the plant working, Davis said.
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