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Jan Steinman's avatar

My "collapse now and avoid the rush" plan has included moving to an area with 100% hydropower, not that I'm under any illusions about how "green" it is, but because it seems to me the most likely to be able to continue for some time.

The problem of the *production* of electricity in such a case is very small, and it is then overwhelmed by the *maintenance* of that production.

We were "down" last Christmas eve for 29 hours, due to a tree that fell on a power pole, which took out a segment of three-phase hi-line (14,400 volts) going over a river, just one kilometre from my rural intentional community.

I walked down to check it out.

They had to build a road to the site from scratch, so the heavy pole truck could get in! Just in the short time I was there, there were six bits of heavy diesel equipment there. This did not include what I estimate to be three truckloads of gravel (30 cubic metres) to build the road.

BC Hydo said just 620 customers were impacted. In a future scenario, I think smallish segments of the grid will simply be abandoned when such things happen — or best case, may take weeks to repair.

Coming soon, to a civilization near you: https://vimeo.com/1129352325/68b9e4d0b0

(And no, that video was not of the mishap I described! But a year later, BC Hydro found it necessary to replace the 125,000 volt lines connecting our area's ~25,000 people to the greater grid, due to corrosion. Even though we have 75 MW of hydro production — enough for 20 times as many people — it is privately owned, and is sold to California! https://powellriverenergy.com/ I live just 3km from half that production, but we get to enjoy NONE of it!)

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