Zero Hedge
Rep. Chuck Edwards (R-NC), representing a district in the western portion of the state battered by Hurricane Helene, released a press release Sunday detailing the infrastructure devastation.
Edwards said power outages remain widespread in Western North Carolina as of Sunday. Fast-forward to Wednesday morning, Poweroutage.US data shows more than 400,000 residents are without power in the region.
He explained that 360 power substations “are out,” indicating that “many of these substations were completely flooded, and Duke Energy is unable to assess the damage until the flooding has lowered, the water has been pumped out, and the equipment is thoroughly dried.”
What’s piqued our interest is that the powering up America theme to power AI data centers and other electrification trends, such as EVs and onshoring manufacturing (as outlined in “The Next AI Trade”), has led to shortages and price increases in the transformer market.
“Distribution transformers are a bedrock component of our energy infrastructure,” National Renewable Energy Laboratory researcher Killian McKenna said, who was recently quoted by PV Magazine.
McKenna pointed out, “But utilities needing to add or replace them are currently facing high prices and long wait times due to supply chain shortages. This has the potential to affect energy accessibility, reliability, affordability—everything.”
Other reasons for the transformer shortages besides power grid upgrades include raw material sourcing problems, pandemic-related supply chain woes and backlogs, labor constraints, shipping issues, and geopolitical tensions.
Given all of this, Jesse D. Jenkins, an assistant professor and macro-energy systems engineering and policy expert at Princeton University, responded to the dire situation of a grid apocalypse playing out in the Southeast US:
“This is devastating. We do NOT have 360 substations worth of transformers and other electrical equipment sitting in stockpiles waiting to be deployed. It could take a very long time to restore power to everyone. Are we facing a Hurricane Maria-type impact on grid infrastructure?
Making matters worse for residents of North Carolina, some X users are pointing out the Biden-Harris administration supplied transformers to Ukraine. It’s unclear if these transformers were drained for US stockpiles. Meanwhile, others note that Ukraine uses a different electrical system than the US.
What’s not questionable is this: Earlier this year, US ambassador to Kyiv Bridget Brink jumped for joy on X, indicating United States Agency for International Development delivered “50 voltage transformers, 9 current transformers, & 80 isolators.”
You know, just Washington elites have been prioritizing Ukraine’s power grid over the US’ fragile grid.
Nathaniel Horadam, a managing consultant and automated vehicle specialist with the Atlanta-based nonprofit Center for Transportation and the Environment, wrote on X, “ It’s Hard to express how insane this is. With ongoing supply chain challenges facing switchgear and transformers, this could take many months to resolve.”
“There’s no excess capacity to quickly replace substation infrastructure. Lower priority sites could literally take years,” Horadam warned.
[…]
It gets more obvious by the day. The U.S. is run by criminal monsters bent on our destruction, particularly the destruction of the White Race. This is a long standing, world-wide phenomenon of evil. Their Goyim sycophants notwithstanding, their identity is as clear as the nose on your face ... and theirs.
This post from AND magazine has a bunch of things to be scared about. One of them is the problem of China putting backdoors in the software of transformers. The US now have a shortage of them due to sending some to Ukraine and now many being damaged or destroyed by hurricane Helene.
https://substack.com/app-link/post?publication_id=746580&post_id=146880101&utm_source=post-email-title&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=false&r=p6hie&token=eyJ1c2VyX2lkIjo0MjI5MzAzMCwicG9zdF9pZCI6MTQ2ODgwMTAxLCJpYXQiOjE3MjE2NTcyMTMsImV4cCI6MTcyNDI0OTIxMywiaXNzIjoicHViLTc0NjU4MCIsInN1YiI6InBvc3QtcmVhY3Rpb24ifQ.BxDmPOycralg0EEpX5tpOZkHkFO3t3bmwMzdgHUc2vg