A Gustav Story: Dramatic Midnight Mission Reconnects New Orleans-area 'Island' to the Grid

09/04/2008

 

Three, two, one ... those who heard the countdown in person or by phone said you could have cut the tension with a knife: an operator called out the sequence to the closing of an electrical breaker, toward an uncertain result. At stake: whether every remaining light in New Orleans would go out.

The breaker closed. Applause erupted, as a previously "islanded" portion of Entergy's transmission system south of Lake Pontchartrain was successfully reconnected to the rest of the company's system. The innovative operation, later described as "a historic, defining moment" by Entergy Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Wayne Leonard, was completed by a cross-functional team from transmission, fossil, system planning and operations, and nuclear, after Hurricane Gustav heavily damaged key transmission lines in the New Orleans area.

The islanded portion of the system was resynchronized to the grid just before midnight Sept. 2, the day after Gustav slammed into the Louisiana coast at Cocodrie, on its way to causing 850,000 outages, the second most in Entergy's history. A second tie was made minutes later, further stabilizing the grid. 

The ties restored the integrity of the southeastern Louisiana transmission system and made it possible for workers to carefully begin restoring load and additional generation for the area. That process continues today.

"This restoration event was critical to the overall restoration effort and is unprecedented on the Entergy system," said George Bartlett, director, transmission operations. "It made it possible to immediately restore high-priority loads such as hospitals, pumping stations, courthouses, television stations and other key infrastructure."

Earlier, unacceptable test results forced the project team to abandon its first attempt to reconnect the area, from the Michoud site in eastern New Orleans. As bad weather continued to plague the region, the team on the ground moved their equipment a few miles to the Almonaster site. There, they hoped to take advantage of new, gas breakers for synchronizing purposes.

Once set up at Almonastor, the operator called out readings on the synchroscope, a device that displays on a clock-style face whether power networks and generators can be safely connected.

"In Jackson, and at other sites, team members gathered around the phone to hear the countdown to closing the breaker. I think everyone held their breath as he called out '3 o’clock, 6 o’clock, 9 o’clock, and gave a final brief count, and then the systems were back on line," Bartlett said.