Penelec Conducting Inspections and Maintenance to Help Enhance Service Reliability for Customers Through Summer Season

Photo is courtesy of FirstEnergy.

Company offers tips for customers to manage rising temperatures and energy costs

ERIE – With the hot, humid summer months expected to produce higher electric usage and potentially severe weather, Penelec, a FirstEnergy Corp. subsidiary, is completing inspections and conducting proactive equipment maintenance across its 31-county northern and central Pennsylvania service area to help enhance service reliability for customers.

“We proactively inspect and maintain our equipment to help ensure our system is prepared for increased electrical demand when temperatures soar,” said Scott Wyman, president of FirstEnergy’s Pennsylvania operations.

“These important steps help to minimize the length and impact of service interruptions should summer storms cause power outages.”

Penelec crews are wrapping up inspections of its local energy delivery system to ensure electrical equipment is ready to perform reliably with elevated summer electrical demand, typically due to air conditioning usage.

Substation electricians use thermovision cameras during summer-readiness inspections to capture infrared images, helping to detect potential problems within substations and on power lines that cannot be observed during regular visual inspections.

These images can identify equipment issues such as loose connections, corrosion and load imbalances, and utility workers are able to make repairs to prevent potential power outages in the future.

In addition, helicopter patrols have completed inspections of more than 2,500 miles of power lines owned by Mid-Atlantic Interstate Transmission, LLC (MAIT), a FirstEnergy transmission subsidiary, located in the Penelec area.

The inspections are designed to look for damaged wire, broken cross arms and other hardware problems not visible from the ground.

Any potential reliability issues identified during the inspections will be addressed. Penelec is also trimming trees in communities across its eastern Pennsylvania service area.

Maintaining proper clearances around electrical equipment can help reduce the frequency and duration of tree-related power outages, especially those associated with severe weather.

Since the beginning of the year, tree contractors have trimmed along about 1,600 miles of power lines in the Penelec service area and remain on schedule to complete an additional 2,200 miles of work by year end.

A team of Penelec and FirstEnergy employees will be conducting storm readiness exercises and drills in the near future to test Penelec’s restoration process used to repair storm-related power outages.

Storm drills are becoming more common in the utility industry in the wake of severe weather over the last several years.

With the summer storm season also comes higher-than-usual temperatures and rising energy costs.

Customers can take steps to beat the heat while also managing their electricity bill this summer.

The following tips can help customers use electricity wisely during this period of high demand:

Penelec serves approximately 588,000 customers within 17,600 square miles of northern and central Pennsylvania. Follow Penelec on Twitter @Penelec and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/PenelecElectric.

FirstEnergy is dedicated to integrity, safety, reliability and operational excellence. Its 10 electric distribution companies form one of the nation’s largest investor-owned electric systems, serving customers in Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, West Virginia, Maryland and New York.

The company’s transmission subsidiaries operate approximately 24,000 miles of transmission lines that connect the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic regions. Follow FirstEnergy online at www.firstenergycorp.com and on Twitter @FirstEnergyCorp.

Exit mobile version