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Thursday, 12 March 2009

NASA: Impact of Solar Flare



NASA's 132-page report, entitled Severe Space Weather Events — Understanding Societal and Economic Impacts, paints a pretty grim picture of the damage that could occur in the USA (and presumably elsewhere in the world) due to severe space weather:
According to the report, power grids may be more vulnerable than ever. The problem is interconnectedness. In recent years, utilities have joined grids together to allow long-distance transmission of low-cost power to areas of sudden demand. On a hot summer day in California, for instance, people in Los Angeles might be running their air conditioners on power routed from Oregon. It makes economic sense—but not necessarily geomagnetic sense. Interconnectedness makes the system susceptible to wide-ranging "cascade failures."

...He found more than 350 transformers at risk of permanent damage and 130 million people without power. The loss of electricity would ripple across the social infrastructure with "water distribution affected within several hours; perishable foods and medications lost in 12-24 hours; loss of heating/air conditioning, sewage disposal, phone service, fuel re-supply and so on."
The solution is a more sturdy electric infrastructure. Who knows if or when that will occur. Meanwhile the severe space weather could happen at any time, even tomorrow.

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4 Comments:

Blogger Monty said...

Anywhere else in the world? Hah! US power lines are obsolete. Name one major cascade failure incident in Europe.

8:18 AM  
Blogger Firefly said...

An even better idea is getting technology to the point where we don't rely on grids (telecommunication, broadband, plumbing, electricity). Grids must be nationally maintained and built; raising taxes.

This is why taxes are always so high these days: We have more stuff.

Grids make us reliant on outside intervention.

We'd have better local economies and communities if we maintained local grids (if the area is environmentally appropriate).

It would mean lower taxes, jobs closer to home and it'd be easier on the environment.

6:12 PM  
Blogger Arcane said...

It is my feeling from consistant observation over the last 5 years, that someone knows something somewhere. As of late there has been quite a bit of conversation regarding space weather. I understand widespread mass hysteria is not the answer but it sure would be nice if people would quit being so vague and non- commital and just have the courage to step up to the plate and say something like "We hope and pray we are wrong but just in case get your gear together"! Oh and for those of you that are planning on making a comment about my 5 years observing as being a insignificant amount of time to know anything abouteart events...i say bleh! I've around long enough to know when one of the bigger players like Michio Kaku gets on TV and says physicists made a mistake by 20% and coupling that with the fact that venus will not be protecting us in the near future...the probibility is high that we may have issues! Thank you

8:37 AM  
Blogger Hermster said...

Good stuff Rob, thanks. Next week I'm putting up a small solar panel system (24v) I hope a massive solar flare doesn't fry my new system. From what I understand, we only have 12 minutes to prepare for a solar flare. Bummer

10:24 AM  

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