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There鈥檚 a Solution to Power Outages During Texas Storms, But You Won鈥檛 Like It

Two trees couldn't withstand the storm in this backyard near Lower Greenville in Dallas. They tore apart a fence and damaged a roof and tore down a power line.
Courtesy of Jerome Weeks / 四虎影院
Two trees couldn't withstand the storm in this backyard near Lower Greenville in Dallas. They tore apart a fence and damaged a roof and tore down a power line.

Against the backdrop of a debate over   (i.e. power plants) to meet growing demand, two instances of large-scale outages in the past few weeks show a more common vulnerability: power lost to fallen or damaged power lines during storms. Could anything have been done to prevent the outages? The short answer is yes. But chances are you won鈥檛 like the full explanation.

A a little over a week ago left   without power for days, in sub-freezing temperatures. 鈥淲e do have a power system that鈥檚 primarily based in Texas on overhead distribution lines. And those distribution lines are very vulnerable to weather related events,鈥 says  , Electrical and Engineering professor at Texas A&M University.

Russell says that overall, the U.S. 鈥 and in particular Texas 鈥 has a very reliable power system. Even during ice storms, power plants can typically stay up and running. (With a few exceptions, like the statewide blackouts of 2011.) But the lines that take the power to people can run into issues. And their number one obstacle?

鈥淭he big issue is trees,鈥 says Russell. That鈥檚 right. Our leafy friends that give us shade and filter the air? They don鈥檛 get along very well with power lines.

鈥淚ce or heavy snow weighs down branches,鈥 Russell says. 鈥淲hich causes those branches to break and fall over the power system, or weights them down into the power lines and shorts them out.鈥

And it鈥檚 not just ice storms that can cause outages like this. Hurricanes and even your basic thunder storm with strong winds can cause the same kind of outages in Houston that ice causes in Dallas. In the case of the West Texas ice storm before Thanksgiving, few trees were behind the outages. Rather it was ice itself, weighing down lines and poles, that caused outages, a very rare event.

One solution would be to re-build the power lines in Dallas and elsewhere so they鈥檙e strong enough to withstand an ice or storm. But Russell says that would be way too expensive 鈥 consumers wouldn鈥檛 want to pay for it. It would be even more expensive would be to take power lines and put them underground.

Think of it like this: if you鈥檙e the city of Dallas, how many snowplows should you buy? With storms infrequent and budgets tight, it may not make sense to spend too much for rare events.

But there is one thing that wouldn鈥檛 cost much more and would greatly reduce outages during ice and wind storms, however infrequent they end up being.鈥淲hat you would do is, you would go in and you would trim all overhead branches [around power distribution lines]. Remove them completely,鈥 says Russell. 鈥淎nd you would also cut the trees back from the right of way to some substantial distance.鈥

That鈥檚 right. Cut back 鈥 and cut down 鈥 many of the trees near power lines, and you鈥檒l see many fewer outages.

Current state law doesn鈥檛 give any jurisdiction for tree trimming to utilities out of their ten-foot right-of-way. 鈥淎 tree that鈥檚 50-feet tall, but ten feet out of the right-of-way, it it falls, it鈥檚 going to take down the power system,鈥 Russell says, pointing out that almost all of power line interference from trees comes from ones outside of the utilities鈥 right-of-ways.

B. Don Russell with Texas A&M says there's an affordable solution to prevent power outages during storms in Texas: cut down trees.
Credit Courtesy of Texas A&M
B. Don Russell with Texas A&M says there's an affordable solution to prevent power outages during storms in Texas: cut down trees.

  But changing attitudes (and laws) about trees and power lines would require a major shift. It鈥檚 a political uphill battle. Consumers would have to decide they value power during major storms more than a leafy street. They鈥檇 have to trust utilities not to overstep their bounds. 鈥淓very time there is a major tree-trimming exercise by utilities, there are substantial complaints,鈥 Russell says. Increase utilities鈥 jurisdiction and you鈥檇 be likely to see those complaints skyrocket.鈥淰egetation management鈥 (aka tree-trimming and brush clearing) is the largest expense for utilities, according to Russell. 鈥淪o when you鈥檙e taking about this, you鈥檙e talking about something that鈥檚 already a huge expense,鈥 he says. It would take money to clear trees in danger of knocking out power lines, but Russell argues that it would be 鈥渟ubstantially cheaper鈥 in the long run when compared to rebuilding the power lines to be stronger. Factor in savings from not having to do tree maintenance or sending out crews when lines are down and it ends up being the best option from a reliability and affordability standpoint, he says.

Russell, who says he loves trees, too, points out that to increase power line reliability in the state wouldn鈥檛 require a huge impact on Texas trees. 鈥淭he number of trees we have to cut to make the power system rugged is a trivial fraction of the number of trees in the state,鈥 he says. But it鈥檚 still a big number: at least a million trees in North Texas to protect that area from ice storms. (Russell鈥檚 recommendations are  on file with the .)

But absent any policy changes from the state or Public Utility Commission, there鈥檚 really only one 鈥渟olution鈥 left.

鈥淪o therefore, we pretty much must simply say, 鈥榃e鈥檙e gonna do the best we can,鈥欌 Russell says. 鈥淏ut there are gonna be times in ice storms where the power goes out.鈥

Copyright 2020 KUT 90.5. To see more, visit .

Terrence Henry is a Senior Reporter at KUT and StateImpact Texas. He has worked as an editor, writer and web producer for The Washington Post and The Atlantic. He has a bachelor鈥檚 degree in International Relations from Brigham Young University. Email: thenry@stateimpact.org Twitter: @terrencehenry