Hawaiian Electric Continues to Advance Wildfire Safety Efforts
12 November 2024 - 1:03AM
Business Wire
Operational changes, new technology and Public
Safety Power Shutoff lead to estimated 60% reduction in wildfire
risk from utility equipment
Since launching its expanded wildfire safety strategy one year
ago, Hawaiian Electric Company, Inc. (“Hawaiian Electric”), a
subsidiary of Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc. (NYSE: HE)
(“HEI”), has made significant improvements that have reduced the
wildfire risk from its equipment. Its actions include a Public
Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS) program, replacing and testing
thousands of utility poles, upgrading miles of overhead power
lines, clearing intrusive vegetation near electrical equipment, and
installing weather stations and AI-assisted high definition video
cameras.
“There is no question that wildfires remain a persistent threat
to our communities and we are taking that threat seriously. We
continue to invest in new technology and upgrades to our
infrastructure to make the grid more resilient, improve reliability
and address growing risks from wildfires and other hazards,” said
Jim Alberts, Hawaiian Electric senior vice president and chief
operations officer.
The upgrades are part of Hawaiian Electricʻs multi-year grid
resilience program to harden against wildfires, hurricanes, tsunami
and flooding, and to adapt to impacts of climate change.
Hawaiian Electric has been working with Filsinger Energy
Partners, a nationally recognized independent energy advisory firm
that specializes in wildfire mitigation strategies and risk
modeling, since early 2024. Filsinger estimates that the various
wildfire risk mitigation actions and programs implemented by
Hawaiian Electric have reduced the risk of wildfire from the
utility’s equipment by approximately 60%.
Hawaiian Electric is spending about $120 million in 2024 to make
wildfire safety improvements in four key areas:
Foundational Work:
- Developed wildfire risk maps based on the potential of ignition
by utility equipment.
- Conducted inspections of circuits in high-risk areas to
prioritize hardening work.
- Continued ongoing vegetation management efforts in areas
adjacent to power lines on all islands, spending $100 million in
the last four years.
- Installing 3,534 fire-safe fuses to reduce the risk of
ignition.
- Installing 1,071 new lightning arrestors to further protect
equipment from lightning strikes.
Operational Changes:
- Launched a Public Safety Power Shutoff program. Under this
program, Hawaiian Electric may preemptively shut off power in areas
that are at high risk of wildfires during periods of forecast high
winds and dry conditions.
- Started deployment of spotters in risk areas during hazardous
weather conditions.
- Set circuit breakers to automatically shut off power in risk
areas when a disturbance is detected on a circuit.
Situational Awareness:
- Installed a network of 53 weather stations in wildfire-prone
areas on four islands to provide key information about wind,
temperature and humidity to help the company better predict and
respond to fire weather conditions. The weather stations, mounted
on utility poles, provide meteorological data that will help the
company decide whether to activate and deactivate a PSPS.
- Started installation of a network of 78 artificial
intelligence-assisted high-definition video cameras to help quickly
detect wildfires.
Grid Hardening:
- Replaced and upgraded 2,202 utility poles.
- Replaced more than 16 miles of older overhead lines with new,
more resilient lines.
- Installed 4,514 single-phase fault current indicators, which
allow crews to more quickly locate disturbances on lines in
high-risk areas.
In addition, Hawaiian Electric is working with community
partners on wildfire safety projects, such as the construction of a
firebreak at Leihōkū Elementary in Wai‘anae. The project was
completed in August and included the removal of more than 1,000
feet of kiawe trees and grasses on Department of Hawaiian Home
Lands property.
Hawaiian Electric continues to adapt its Wildfire Safety
Strategy to address the elevated risks in Hawaiʻi. The company
continues to seek grants and federal funding for safety and
resilience programs and is developing a longer-term wildfire safety
plan, which will be filed with the Public Utilities Commission in
January 2025.
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version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241111779931/en/
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