Friday, August 27, 2021 CapitalPress.com 7 Power lines keep sparking fi res. Why don’t utility companies bury more lines? By SIERRA DAWN McCLAIN Capital Press Pacifi c Gas and Electric, a utility company serving 16 million Californians, plans to bury 10,000 miles of power lines throughout Northern Cal- ifornia to reduce wildfi re risk at a cost of up to $20 billion. The move, critics say, is long overdue. PG&E’s equip- ment, according to a Wall Street Journal investigation, has ignited more than 20 wildfi res in the past several years, burning thousands of homes and killing more than 100 people. Most of the fi res started when trees touched power lines. Besides starting wildfi res, overhead lines are vulnerable to ice and wind storms. Last winter, for example, an ice storm knocked out power in some parts of Oregon’s Willa- mette Valley for days. “We know that we have long argued that under- grounding was too expen- sive,” Patti Poppe, PG&E’s chief executive, told report- ers. “This is where we say it’s too expensive not to under- ground. Lives are on the line.” Now, rural communities across the West are posing the same question to their utility companies: Since power lines are a fi re hazard and cause other problems, why not bury them? Undergrounding has drawbacks, utility companies say. With power lines under- ground, faults are diffi cult to locate. Underground wires are expensive to install, suscepti- ble to fl oods, earthquakes and accidental dig-ins, and can prove diffi cult to repair. But advocates of burying power lines say the benefi ts far outweigh costs. Some utility companies are aggressively burying lines, while others are hes- itant. The two biggest bar- riers to change, experts say, are environmental regulations and insuffi cient funding. The Capital Press con- tacted several major utility companies in the region about their plans. Oregon-based Portland General Electric already has more than half of its system underground, according to spokeswoman Andrea Platt. PGE doesn’t have plans for a mass-scale underground- ing eff ort, but Platt said the company, which serves about 90,000 customers, is “always evaluating where additional undergrounding could help mitigate risks.” Platt said there isn’t a “sin- gle, silver-bullet solution” to protecting lines. PGE is clear- ing trees and brush near lines, installing fi re-resistant poles, Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press Power lines run through farmland. More electric utili- ties are considering burying them in the wake of cata- strophic fi res that have been linked to overhead lines. inspecting high-risk areas and piloting new technologies. The challenge, Platt said, is balancing the cost of burying power lines with the impact on consumer prices. “We try to be judicious,” she said. Running lines under- ground, according to the Cali- fornia Public Utility Commis- sion, costs about 10 times as much as overhead lines, trans- lating into higher utility rates. A price hike could hurt consumers. Rural households across the U.S. already pay 40% more than their metro- politan counterparts on their energy bills, according to a 2018 joint study from the American Council for an Energy-Effi cient Economy and the Energy Effi ciency for All Coalition. California’s PG&E, for example, will pass some por- tion of its $20 billion price tag on to customers. Paul Doherty, a PG&E spokes- man, said the company “will leverage customer and public funding.” Pacifi c Power, a divi- sion of Pacifi Corp, is another major West Coast utility serv- ing 780,000 customers across Washington, Oregon and California. Victims of last Septem- ber’s Beachie Creek fi re east of Salem have sued the utility seeking more than $1 billion. They allege the utility failed to shut down its power lines even though a strong wind storm had been forecast. According to spokesman Drew Hanson, about 30% of Pacifi c Power’s Oregon dis- tribution lines are already underground, a percentage that continues growing. “Going underground more is an evaluated option, but it’s not a cure-all,” said Hanson. Hanson said burying wires can be challenging due to soil conditions, limited accessibil- ity and rugged terrain. Filing environmental impact reports and getting approval to cross private land are also obstacles. To mitigate wildfi re risk, the company is putting syn- thetic coating on wires, replacing wood with steel poles and clearing vegetation in high-risk areas more often. This year, Pacifi c Power also hired three meteorologists and two emergency staff . PNGC Power, an umbrella organization for 15 mem- ber-owned cooperative util- ities across Oregon, said its public utility district mem- bers, or PUDs, are all busy creating wildfi re plans. “Since it’s a huge topic of conversation right now, they’re all speaking about it,” said Andrew Barter, a spokes- man for PNGC Power. James Ramseyer, mem- ber services director for Consumers Power Inc., a not-for-profi t rural electric cooperative serving Benton, Lane, Lincoln, Linn, Mar- ion and Polk counties in Ore- gon’s Willamette Valley, said about a third of his company’s lines are underground and he expects that number to con- tinue climbing. Consumers Power hopes to underground 70% of its wires in high-risk fi re zones by 2022, but Ramseyer said the company faces two main obstacles: painstaking envi- ronmental reviews and insuf- fi cient funding. Some county-level utilities are also pushing fi re mitiga- tion eff orts. Lane Electric Cooperative, serving 14 towns and cities in Western Oregon, currently has more than half its system underground, higher than the national average, and buries more every year. According to Debi Wilson, general manager, Lane Elec- tric is applying for federal grants to build more fi re-re- silient systems, especially in the McKenzie River Valley, which was ravaged by last year’s Holiday Farm Fire. Any solutions, under- grounding or otherwise, will take time, so offi cials encour- age rural communities to have backup generators and emer- gency plans for summer 2021. Drought takes toll on Idaho crop yields By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press As drought continues to grip the West, Minnesota and the Dakotas, the American Farm Bureau Federation has been checking in with its members to see how they are faring. Its latest report assessing conditions focuses on Idaho, where 88% of the state is expe- riencing drought. Of that, 58% is experiencing extreme or exceptional drought. “Record high temperatures, rising consecutive days without rainfall and a record number of days with triple-digit heat have been commonplace throughout the 2021 growing season,” the Idaho Farm Bureau reported. No stranger to dry condi- tions, the average annual pre- cipitation for much of the state’s most populous and pro- ductive lands is less than 12 inches. This year has been espe- cially dry and hot, with hydrol- ogists recording average rain- fall of about 4.4 inches. Even the northern region, which commonly receives sig- nifi cantly more rainfall than other regions, is experiencing exceptionally dry conditions, Farm Bureau stated. Tom Mosman, a dryland canola and wheat farmer in the Camas Prairie region of north central Idaho, said he typically gets 70 to 80 bushels of wheat per acre. “This year if we average 40 or 50, we will be doing good,” he said. Northern Idaho and East- ern Oregon farmer Travis Port, who grows hay and winter Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press File Five horses have been diagnosed with the West Nile virus in Idaho. Equine West Nile Virus confi rmed across Idaho The Idaho State Department of Agri- culture has confi rmed fi ve cases of Equine West Nile virus. The department’s Animal Health Laboratory confi rmed one case each in Lemhi, Twin Falls, Canyon, Ada and Blaine counties. The horse in Lemhi County was euthanized due to the sever- ity of the disease. The others are recover- ing under veterinarians’ supervision. State Veterinarian Scott Leibsle on Aug. 20 said the cases surfaced in the last 7-10 days. Drought kept mosquito populations at bay this year, he said in an interview. “Typically we would see cases of West Nile in horses early in the summer, if we had normal rainfall,” Leibsle said. Some horse owners haven’t been as vigilant about vaccinations this year, he said. “Ultimately, the prevention for this is vaccination — ideally in the spring, before mosquito hatches occur and mos- quito populations have a chance to estab- lish themselves,” Leibsle said. Nearly 98% of horses that test pos- itive are unvaccinated or under-vacci- nated, he said. The vaccine has been available for about 20 years. Leibsle said more cases of Equine West Nile are occurring around the West recently. Unlike a respiratory virus, it cannot be transmitted from one horse to another. He said veterinarians can advise horse owners on Equine West Nile and other annual core vaccinations and booster schedules. Horses that have been vaccinated for West Nile must receive an annual booster, he said. ISDA said horse owners also should take precautions such as using fans or repellants, and removing standing water where possible. The virus is commonly spread to people and horses by a mosquito bite. Signs in horses include fever, weakness, unusual movements or even an inability to stand or move. There is no vaccine for people. In Oregon, the West Nile virus has been found in mosquitos in Baker and Jackson counties. In Washington, it has been found in mosquitos in Walla Walla County. Reporter Mia Ryder-Marks contributed to this story. peas, said he’s expecting about 200 pounds of peas per acre — compared to average yields of nearly 2,000 pounds. He esti- mates his hay production at half of normal. “Certainly, farmers and ranchers without access to developed water reserves who are dependent on precipitation and snowpack have really been devastated,” Farm Bureau said. Agricultural lands with access to water reserves such as reservoirs, lakes and aquifers have a better chance of getting though this growing season. But signifi cant conservation and curtailment have already begun. Some reservoirs, such as those in the Wood and Lost River basins, are below 7% of total capacity — prompting some water managers to stop water deliveries. Many other reservoirs have dropped below 50% capacity. As of Aug. 22, Arrowrock Reservoir is at 24% and Mann Creek is at 21% in the West Central Basins. In the Upper Snake River Basin, Island Park Reservoir is at 43% capacity and American Falls is at 14%, according to the Bureau of Reclamation. Many irrigation districts have issued shutdown warnings for September — over a month before the usual cutoff , Farm Bureau reported. On the broader front, nearly 80% of the West plus Minne- sota, North Dakota and South Dakota are experiencing severe drought. That’s an increase from 68.5% the week of June 17 and a sizeable jump from the 34% a year earlier. More than 90% of Califor- nia, Montana, North Dakota, Nevada, Oregon and Utah is in severe drought or worse. 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