Florida Power & Light Company Upgrade Energy Grid in City of Melbourne, Palm Bay
By Space Coast Daily // April 22, 2022
FPL: service reliability for customers is up 45% over the past decade
BREVARD COUNTY, FLORIDA – Florida Power & Light Company plans to upgrade the energy grid in Melbourne and Palm Bay in 2022 to enhance day-to-day reliability for customers and improve resiliency in the face of severe weather.
Strengthening power poles, maintaining trees and vegetation near power lines, installing smart grid technology, regularly inspecting equipment and undergrounding neighborhood power lines in targeted areas have helped improve service reliability by 45% for FPL customers over the past decade.
“We understand how much our customers depend on the critical service we provide. That’s why our team works tirelessly to continuously improve the energy grid across our service area – from Miami to Pensacola,” said Eric Silagy, chairman, and CEO of FPL.
“We know that in Florida it’s not a matter of if, but when, the next storm will impact our state. Our disciplined infrastructure and technology investments are improving day-to-day service for customers and helping us speed restoration after a storm.”
2022 improvements in the Melbourne area
FPL plans to make the following improvements in and near Melbourne this year:
■ Strengthening nine main power lines, including those that serve critical services that are necessary for communities to recover faster after major storms.
■ Maintaining trees and vegetation – a common cause of power outages, particularly during hurricanes and severe weather — along 224 miles of power lines.
■ Inspecting 4,147 power poles in Melbourne as part of an eight-year inspection cycle, strengthening or replacing those that no longer meet FPL’s industry-leading standards.
■ Inspect 59 main power lines and equipment using infrared technology to detect issues before they cause a power interruption.
When the planned 2022 work is completed, FPL will have made the following improvements in and near Melbourne since the historic 2004-2005 hurricane seasons:
■ Strengthened 46 main power lines, including those that serve critical services.
■ Inspected and maintained vegetation near 2,570 miles of power lines — an average of 161 miles per year.
■ Inspected all 22,127 power poles every eight years.
■ Installed smart grid technology, including 2,110 automated switches on main and neighborhood power lines.
■ Inspected 126 main power lines and equipment using infrared technology.
2022 improvements in the Palm Bay area
FPL plans to make the following improvements in and near Palm Bay this year:
■ Strengthening six main power lines, including those that serve critical services that are necessary for communities to recover faster after major storms.
■ Maintaining trees and vegetation – a common cause of power outages, particularly during hurricanes and severe weather — along 233 miles of power lines.
■ Inspect 24,024 power poles in Palm Bay as part of an eight-year inspection cycle, strengthening or replacing those that no longer meet FPL’s industry-leading standards.
■ Installing smart grid technology, including 15 automated switches on main and neighborhood power lines to help detect problems and restore service faster when outages occur.
■ Inspect 39 main power lines and equipment using infrared technology to detect issues before they cause a power interruption.
When the planned 2022 work is completed, FPL will have made the following improvements in and near Palm Bay since the historic 2004-2005 hurricane seasons:
■ Strengthened 28 main power lines, including those that serve critical services.
■ Inspected and maintained vegetation near 2,869 miles of power lines — an average of 179 miles per year.
■ Inspected all 41,343 power poles every eight years.
■ Installed smart grid technology, including 3,049 automated switches on main and neighborhood power lines.
■ Inspected 114 main power lines and equipment using infrared technology.
FPL’s adoption of emerging technology helps improve day-to-day service reliability.
Drones and robots are used to conduct regular assessments and locate potential power issues to fix many problems before they affect customers.
Intelligent devices can automatically redirect power, self-heal and eliminate or minimize customers affected — resulting in more than 10 million outages avoided over the last decade.
FPL is also continuing to boost reliability by putting more power lines underground in neighborhoods that can most benefit based on analysis of past hurricane outages, vegetation-related service interruptions, and other reliability data.
FPL’s Storm Secure Underground Pilot Program, launched in 2018, has completed about 600 neighborhood projects through the end of 2021, and FPL plans to bring the benefits of undergrounding to more neighborhoods across Florida in the future.
“We continue to deploy innovative and industry-leading solutions that improve the grid – investments that are paying off for our customers,” said Manny Miranda, executive vice president of power delivery for FPL.
“We are always looking for new ways to enhance the reliability of our service. From examining lessons learned from past storms to incorporating new advancements, we are seeing the value of our efforts every day.”
Strengthening the FPL grid throughout Florida
Since 2006, FPL has made significant investments to harden the grid against hurricanes and extreme weather and enhance day-to-day reliability. Highlights include:
■ Replacing wooden transmission structures with new ones made of steel or concrete.
■ Hardening main power lines that serve critical community facilities and services.
■ Inspecting power poles and strengthening or replacing those that no longer meet FPL’s industry-leading standards for strength.
■ Installing more than 195,000 intelligent devices along the grid to detect and prevent power outages and minimize restoration times when outages occur.
■ Conducting daily drone flights (more than 120,000 in 2021) to proactively identify potential areas of concern before an outage occurs and to help us assess damage following severe weather
■ Maintaining trees and other vegetation along more than 25,000 miles of power lines each year to reduce outages.
■ Placing more neighborhood power lines underground through the Storm Secure Underground Pilot Program
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