The Grid 2021: Renewal

Page 25

Staying Connected: Adapting Mutual Assistance to New Challenges - By Joelle Lancaster Advisor, Regulatory Affairs & Grid Infrastructure, Canadian Electricity Association

T

he electricity grid is an essential part of our everyday lives, powering the alarm clocks that wake us up in the morning to the hallway nightlight that flickers on when we go to bed. Powering the grid – underneath the generation, transmission and distribution equipment – is a vast network of lineworkers, arborists, grid operators working to repair lines, trim hazard trees, all while keeping a close eye on the grid to ensure that interruptions to power flow, such as storm damage, can be dealt with as safely and as efficiently as possible. Adaptation is a constant in the electricity industry, with forestry and lineworkers prepared to address issues that arise both within and outside the bounds of their service territory, and to assist in circumstances that have threatened the reliable distribution of electricity to their neighbours. Mutual assistance agreements underpin these activities and reinforce the engagements between various utilities, where their respective lineworkers aid each other to restore power to energy customers across North America in times of severe weather. Such forays can vary from a quick stop in the neighbouring town to help untangle broken power lines following a windstorm, to long journeys with extensive repair work. The network of electricity neighbours can stretch across North America and beyond. Always willing and available to travel great distances to rebuild critical infrastructure, Canadian electricity utilities have provided assistance from Québec to Georgia, Ontario to California, all the way from Prince Edward Island and Alberta to Turks & Caicos, and many more as increasingly severe weather has, due to climate change, stretched the needs of affected utilities. New environments entail new challenges, as electricity workers may have to learn how to safely climb an electrical pole in the absence of bucket trucks or how to adhere to new safety standards for a high voltage system that isn’t quite the mirror image of the one at home.

The beginning of spring 2020 saw an intense and swift new reality for the industry to adapt to, as electricity utilities sought to keep their employees safe while continuing to ensure the reliable supply of electricity – a service essential to Canadians. At the same time, utilities kept mutual systems of assistance in mind, ensuring that electricity employees are able to answer the call for mutual assistance and lend a hand when extreme weather raged, confident that their safety was considered in each step of the process. Best practices and potential challenges were shared and resolved through crossborder forums of utilities dealing with one common, global pandemic. From ensuring that employees could physically distance when traveling to different jurisdictions, to ensuring that essential electricity workers could cross the Canada-US border to respond to extreme weather events, electricity utilities have come together to ensure continued, safe mutual assistance would be available if and when needed. The need for adaptation in the electricity sector is a continuing one, as electricity will remain essential to our day-to-day lives, as modern society will continue to evolve, and as the inevitable challenges will keep us on our toes. Electricity utilities supporting the industry – not only through a pandemic, but through the ongoing effects of climate change and the increasing intensity of extreme weather events – will continue to require collaboration, a key factor in supporting adaptation across the country. The electricity industry remains primed to lend a hand, whether that entails repairing a neighbour’s power lines or endeavouring to find a new industry standard for safety.

canadian electricity association - THE GRID 2021 | Renewal

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Articles inside

A New Chapter for Calgary’s Original Substation

2min
page 48

Reflections on a Tumultuous Year and How Canada’s Electricity Companies Stepped Up

2min
page 47

What can Tommy Douglas Teach Us About Climate Change?

4min
pages 44-45

Renewing Relationships with Northern Indigenous Communities to Increase Energy Efficiency

2min
page 46

Achieving Goals Through Diversity

2min
pages 42-43

Renewed By Our Purpose and Values

10min
pages 31-35

A New Era For The Canadian Electricity Association

4min
pages 36-37

Renewing Relationships for Results: The Canada-U.S. Electricity Partnership

3min
pages 26-27

Ready to Respond: The Electricity Sector and Evolving Cyber Threats

4min
pages 28-30

Seeds of Change: AltaLink’s Largest Wildland Reclamation Work in Banff National Park

3min
pages 22-23

Staying Connected: Adapting Mutual Assistance to New Challenges

3min
page 25

Technological Use to Aid in a Long-Standing Problem

2min
page 24

Hydro Ottawa's Pollinator Meadow An Environmental Renewal Project

5min
pages 20-21

Moving to Net Zero: Manitoba Hydro Ready to Meet Canadian Federal Guidelines

3min
pages 18-19

We Can't Keep Dodging the Iceberg: Getting Moving on Net Zero

5min
pages 16-17

Advancing to Net Carbon Neutral by 2050

2min
page 14

Green Hydrogen: A Key Component in Canada's Clean Energy Transition

2min
pages 10-11

Powering Canada's Transition: In Search of an Electrification Strategy

3min
pages 6-7

Building the Electricity Marketplace of Tomorrow

2min
page 15

From the Editor

1min
pages 4-5

Creating the Conditions for Meaningful Reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples

5min
pages 8-9
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