After Sandy, NYC eyes moving power gear higher

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FILE - This May 22, 2006 file photo shows 7 World Trade Center (right) at ground zero at dusk, Monday, May 22, 2006, in New York. The electrical equipment in the Consolidated Edison substation located in the structure's ground level, sat just high enough to stay mostly dry, allowing the lights in Manhattan's waterfront Battery Park City neighborhood to stay on, while streets for miles around were dark during Superstorm Sandy. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens, File)
FILE - This May 22, 2006 file photo shows 7 World Trade Center (right) at ground zero at dusk, Monday, May 22, 2006, in New York. The electrical equipment in the Consolidated Edison substation located in the structure's ground level, sat just high enough to stay mostly dry, allowing the lights in Manhattan's waterfront Battery Park City neighborhood to stay on, while streets for miles around were dark during Superstorm Sandy. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens, File)
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Con Ed pledged Thursday to spend at least $250 million on short-term improvements at its facilities, such as installing better flood barriers and pumps.

The utility is also looking at reconfiguring its electrical networks so neighborhoods in flood zones can be isolated from the rest of the city, Miksad said. That would prevent flood-related blackouts from extending to dry sections of town, as they did during Sandy.

Much of New York's power distribution system is already underground, sealed off in cables designed to be fully submersible. The bigger problem in major storms is usually the overhead wires that still serve the more suburban and coastal sections of the city.

City officials have talked for years about burying those lines to protect them from the wind, but Miksad said Con Ed estimated the citywide cost at $60 billion.

Huge swaths of Long Island and New Jersey also lost power during the storm, due to the vulnerability of overhead power lines, but there has been little serious discussion of burying them in either state due to the high cost.

Other types of upgrades, though, are getting a closer look.

The New Jersey utility PSE&G is evaluating whether it can build better flood defenses into substations in tidal areas. Of the 294 switching stations and substations on its system, 108 were affected by the storm surge, with some taking on four to eight feet of water, according to the company.

The utility says it also might be able to shorten the duration of outages by installing "smart meters" that can pinpoint which customers have lost power. Right now, it relies on phone reports. Installing the meters just in PSE&G's coverage area could cost $600 million, which has caused some ratepayer advocates to question whether they would be worth the expense.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in a speech Thursday that his administration would independently assess what it would take to make the electrical system, and other vital networks — such as natural gas, phone and cable — capable of withstanding at least a Category 2 hurricane.

"No matter what we do, the tides will continue to come in, and so we have to make our city more resilient in other ways, especially when it comes to our critical infrastructure," he said.

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