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How Duke Energy Prepares for Emergencies and the Restoration Process North Carolina Emergency Management Association Co

How Duke Energy Prepares for Emergencies and the Restoration Process North Carolina Emergency Management Association Conference. Marty Wright, Director Business Excellence Jeff Riggins, Director Storm Governance Randy D. Welch, District Manager. The New Duke Energy .

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How Duke Energy Prepares for Emergencies and the Restoration Process North Carolina Emergency Management Association Co

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  1. How Duke Energy Prepares for Emergencies and the Restoration ProcessNorth Carolina Emergency Management Association Conference

    Marty Wright, Director Business Excellence Jeff Riggins, Director Storm Governance Randy D. Welch, District Manager
  2. The New Duke Energy On January 10, 2011, Duke Energy and Progress Energy announced intent to merge Regulatory approvals were achieved and the Duke Energy and Progress Energy merger has created the largest utility in U.S. – 7.1 million customers The combined company is called Duke Energy and headquartered in Charlotte, N.C. and serves: NC,SC,FL,KY,IN,OH Market Cap of combined companies is $49 billion as of June 12, 15th 2012 The company now has more than a quarter-million miles of primary and secondary distribution lines. That’s almost the distance from the Earth to the moon.
  3. Safety Safety is our top priority Public Educate public before events Public service announcements Media messages Storm website Personnel Tailgate sessions Safety briefings for non-native crews Field oversight of crews
  4. Plan, Train and Drill Planning is the Key to Success Ongoing Process Dedicated Resources Continuous Improvement Scalable Relationships Predetermined Staging Sites Identify Internal Resources
  5. Prepare for Event Monitor and Forecast Weather Predict Potential Damage and Resource Needs Conduct Scheduled Conference Calls Implement Emergency Plan Prepare Employees and Logistics Providers Initiate Mutual Assistance Discussions Begin External Communications
  6. Assess Damage Early assessment Validate resource needs Establish system ETR Complete within 24 hours Ongoing detailed assessment Pole by pole Provide follow-up actions (oil spills, lights, danger trees)
  7. Estimated Time of Restoration Plan delivers timely ETR so our customers can plan Rigorous process for estimating restoration times System Level County level Circuit level Individual customer level Press releases with system & county level ETR Individual ETR available to customers
  8. Service Restoration Service restoration is prioritized Public safety related situations Emergency services (hospital, fire, police) Critical infrastructure (water, sewer) Main distribution lines Lateral neighborhood lines Individual transformers and services Duke leadership manages the restoration process Resource plan managed continuously
  9. Communications During a Storm are Critical Target Audience Governmental Communications Regulatory Communications Media Communications Customer Communications Online Information Messages Magnitude of Storm and Damage Number of Outages Estimated Times of Restoration Safety before, during and after the storm
  10. Focused on Continuous Improvement of our Plan Internal critiques Feedback from customers Analysis of data Best practices
  11. 2011 Damage in Gaston & Lincoln Counties
  12. 2011 Summer Storms / Extreme Flooding
  13. Mutual Assistance
  14. EEI Governing Principles During the 1950’s, The Edison Electric Institute developed “Governing Principles” that member companies adhere to during Mutual Assistance. Pros: High Level Good baseline for how to do business Like a contract (SOX) Safety is always the most important principle Cons: Not very detailed Hard to change Conclusion: Great work but too large to be effective in moving resources More work needed on a detailed level
  15. Regional Mutual Assistance Groups Easier to get fewer companies involved quickly Detailed Guidelines Closer Relationships More effective moving resources Duke is a member of three Southeastern Electric Exchange Mutual Assistance Group Great Lakes Mutual Assistance Group Midwest Mutual Assistance Group There are several others Mid-Atlantic Mutual Assistance Group New York Mutual Assistance Group Texas Northeast Mutual Assistance Group Wisconsin Western
  16. Southeast Electric Exchange Regional Mutual Assistance Group Geography One Call Efficient Availability of Resources Includes almost all major utilities within 1-2 days travel
  17. How Does The Mutual Assistance Process Work? Example: Duke Meteorologists predict a possible ice storm throughout the I-85 corridor Duke would begin talking to neighboring utilities and contractors Verifying weather reports Determining potential Impact Preparing logistics Preparing internal employees and contractors Plan an SEE Mutual Assistance Call if Needed
  18. What Information is Shared On the Call Roll Call Weather report Resource Requests Available Resources Non member companies impacted Logistics Set the date & time for the next conference – give members the toll-free number. Objectives of the Call Identify resource needs/requests (crews, logistics, support, etc.) Identify available resources (including contractors) Match requests with available resources Matched Responding companies and Requesting companies then have the okay to make arrangements like when to travel, exchange rosters, etc.
  19. What Normally Happens Resource requests FAR outweigh available resources Usually most utilities plan for the worst Utilities are conservative Utilities likely to be impacted ask for lots of help Utilities with minimal risk of being impacted are still likely to hold resources until storm passes Weather forecasts are estimates at best One or two degrees of temperature make(s) all the difference in the world from cold rain to tree and line destruction Forecast models never agree on exactly where the ice impact will occur Hard to pre-stage and mobilize before the event Deployed crews may have to be recalled
  20. Decision Time Do we reach out further for resources? Do we wait until impact and see if we can get resources closer that would expedite the restoration? Logistics? Staging Areas? COMMUNICATIONS!!! If conditions warrant, we reach out to the other Regional Mutual Assistance Groups
  21. Wisconsin MA GLMA NEMAG MAMA SEE Western MA Texas MA RMAG (Regional Mutual Assistance Groups) Great Lakes Mutual Assistance Midwest Mutual Assistance Midwest MA NYMAG Mid-Atlantic Mutual Assistance New York Mutual Assistance Group Northeast Mutual Assistance Group Southeastern Electric Exchange Texas Mutual Assistance Western Mutual Assistance Wisconsin Mutual Assistance
  22. Next Call Repeat the process Share and True up weather reports True up resource requests, shift as appropriate COMMUNICATIONS!!! Reach further and harder if damage is significant Leverage relationships Have all the regional mutual assistance groups working to free up resources at the same time Release plans for other utilities
  23. Providing Assistance / Hurricane Irene
  24. Mutual Assistance Isn’t Over When the Power Comes Back On Develop a release strategy Discussions with other impacted utilities to determine if they need resources we will be releasing Discussions with contractors to determine if they have other customers that need assistance Release crews and track them to ensure they arrive safely COMMUNICATIONS!!!
  25. Summary One Day You Are The Bug, The Next Day You Are The Windshield Remember the Golden Rule QUESTIONS??
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