US woefully unprepared for major sun storm

B00Mer

Make Canada Great Again
Sep 6, 2008
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US woefully unprepared for major sun storm



A study by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) claims up to 100 million Americans could lose electrical power in the event of a magnetic space storm, which would knock out the electric grid and cause other infrastructure to fail.

An internal fact sheet in 2012, from the just-released DHS’ Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), noted that the damage and impact from a future solar storm isn’t known.

Space weather means conditions on the sun, in space, the upper atmosphere or in the earth’s magnetic field that can impact technological systems on the ground and endanger human life on earth.

The report states that a “coronal mass ejection” from the sun would first be detected by satellites and would reach the earth in 24-72 hours and affect up to 100 million people.

The largest of these storms are called G-5s and would disrupt power grid operations, GPS satellites, aircraft, manned space flights, satellite operations, communications cables and gas distribution pipelines.

“The extreme geomagnetic space weather event will cause widespread power outages to a large number of people (approximately 100 million people) in a multi-region, multi-state area of the US due to geomagnetic induced currents damaging EHV transformers, especially along coastal regions,” the report says.

Once transformers and transmissions lines are put out of action, it will cause many other electrically operated items to stop working, including water systems, refrigerators, computer systems and fuel distribution.



The report predicts that within 36 hours of the storm passing, 65 million people would have electric power again, and after two weeks another 25 million would be reconnected, but for the remaining ten million people in six states it would take two months to restore power to them, although it doesn’t say why.

However, there is some disagreement about the exact number of people that would be affected, and the document noted that in 2011 DHS experts were not convinced about the appalling consequences of an earlier study. But whatever the effect, its consequences would be huge and unknown.

“It occurs rarely, can’t be predicted, full protection is impossibly expensive and the potential impact ranges from inconvenient to cataclysmic,” said Mark Sauter, coauthor of the book Homeland Security: A Complete Guide, who managed to get hold of the report under the Freedom of Information Act.

He noted that more than 200 pages from the FEMA report were blacked out.

“This makes one wonder why FEMA is refusing to release the government’s space weather response plan. How would the government deal with ten million or many more Americans without power for two months or even longer?” said Sauter.

He questioned if the government is taking the threat seriously or just going through the bureaucratic motions and crossing its fingers that such an event won’t happen.

There were two major solar storms in 1859 and 1921, but electricity was much less prevalent then than today and so their effect was far more limited.

source: US woefully unprepared for major sun storm ? report ? RT USA
 

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
32,230
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>implying that anyone is.

our grids are sh!t. remember T.O. last year? the whole of the N.E. a few years back.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
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Red Deer AB
1 days of freezing rain could crash it just as hard, then if the repair crew has no new parts it stays broken. About that time the homeowner better start being able to power his own home as fuel will be reserved for commercial use.
 

eh1eh

Blah Blah Blah
Aug 31, 2006
10,749
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Under a Lone Palm
Wasn't your Ontario power-lines responsible for the New York blackout a few years back??

How to Protect Your Home from Solar Flares and Solar Storms | Today's Homeowner

Nope.
The Northeast blackout of 2003 was a widespread power outage that occurred throughout parts of the Northeastern and Midwestern United States and the Canadian province of Ontario on Thursday, August 14, 2003, just before 4:10 p.m. EDT (UTC−04).[1]
Some power was restored by 11 p.m. and many others got it back two days later.[2] At the time, it was the world's second most widespread blackout in history, after the 1999 Southern Brazil blackout.[3][4] The outage, which was much more widespread than the Northeast Blackout of 1965, affected an estimated 10 million people in Ontario and 45 million people in eight U.S. states.
The blackout's primary cause was a software bug in the alarm system at a control room of the FirstEnergy Corporation, located in Ohio. A lack of alarm left operators unaware of the need to re-distribute power after overloaded transmission lines hit unpruned foliage, which triggered a race condition in the control software. What would have been a manageable local blackout cascaded into widespread distress on the electric grid.


wiki
 

Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
44,850
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Nakusp, BC
Some friends are praying for the day the grid goes down, hoping mostly for the end of civilization. They think western mindless consumerism and selfish greed... these people are infected with a lack of respect for life and do not deserve this planet.

Doomsday peppers are on high alert?
Are they really hot?