Officials seek to keep substations safe from terror attacks, disasters
By Rick Brewer
Record Staff Writer
Published Saturday, June 4, 2005 



TRACY -- It may not be as beautiful or symbolic as the Golden Gate Bridge,
but the electricity transmission substation located west of Tracy may be
just as valuable a target to terrorists.

So officials from various government and energy organizations have begun
working together to secure substations throughout the country -- including
the one in the Tracy Hills. The idea is to hoard a big enough reserve of
electricity-producing gear -- such as transformers, switches and generators
-- in discreet locations close to the substations that are thought to be the
most likely targets.

That could help get the substations working again quickly after an attack or
other problem, power industry officials say.

And it's about time, said local energy activist Bob Sarvey.

"All it would take is for someone to jump the fence and wire up a couple of
explosives," Sarvey said. "It could bring Northern California to its knees."

The PG&E-owned substation west of Tracy is an important link in what's known
as the Pacific Intertie, the system that transmits and transfers power up
and down the West Coast. A severe interruption could cripple millions of
homeowners and businesses for weeks, if not months, industry officials and
watchdogs say.

"Groups are working on a stockpile initiative," confirmed Jon Tremayne, a
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. spokesman. 

That way, if an attack or natural disaster were to disable a substation,
work could quickly begin to restore the flow of energy.

"Substations have a lot of complicated and expensive equipment," said Kwin
Peterson, a spokesman for the Western Electricity Coordinating Council, a
Salt Lake City-based organization that helps coordinate reliable power
operation to 14 states. "They are designed to be hard to break down under
any circumstances."

The substation west of Tracy is one of the 12 biggest in Northern
California, Tremayne said. Whether it is considered more of a potential
target than others was not disclosed.

"If we have a list, we're certainly not going to tell people about it,"
Peterson said.

Power companies bear the responsibility of maintaining and securing their
lines.

"When it comes to the availability of supplies, the onus is really on the
utility," said Lorie O'Donley, a spokeswoman for the California Independent
System Operator, the organization that runs the state's power grid.
"Everybody's on a heightened alert, but when it comes to ensuring power
security, the companies do a good job of that."

Sarvey disagrees.

"You don't see any security out there," he said after driving past the
facility Friday afternoon. "I think it's at risk."

The hazards always have been there, Tremayne said, adding that cooperation
among utility companies during emergency situations already is common. For
example, PG&E crews were sent out to help Florida utilities repair their
systems during the 2004 hurricane season. 

In 1989, the Bay Area received a new substation quickly after the Loma
Prieta earthquake because of the need to restore power.

Those natural disasters illustrate how impractical it would be to physically
protect the voluminous pieces of infrastructure that comprise the nation's
electricity system from potential attacks. Experts say having a strategy in
place to restore energy as quickly as possible in the event of attack is
more feasible.

"The concept is to know where the stuff is and be able to get to it
quickly," Tremayne said.

http://www.recordnet.com/articlelink/060405/news/articles/060405-gn-1.php



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