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2012 India Blackouts: India Blackout Was The Then-Largest Power Outage in History

Two major blackouts occurred in India in July 2012, affecting over 300 million and 620 million people respectively. An investigation committee found four factors responsible: weak inter-regional transmission corridors due to multiple outages, high loading on a transmission link, inadequate response from local dispatch centers to reduce overdrawing power, and loss of a transmission link due to a protection system mis-operation. The committee offered recommendations to prevent future failures, including auditing protection systems.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
56 views2 pages

2012 India Blackouts: India Blackout Was The Then-Largest Power Outage in History

Two major blackouts occurred in India in July 2012, affecting over 300 million and 620 million people respectively. An investigation committee found four factors responsible: weak inter-regional transmission corridors due to multiple outages, high loading on a transmission link, inadequate response from local dispatch centers to reduce overdrawing power, and loss of a transmission link due to a protection system mis-operation. The committee offered recommendations to prevent future failures, including auditing protection systems.

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2012 India Blackouts

India had two severe blackouts in July 2012. The 30 July 2012
India blackout was the then-largest power outage in history,
counting number of people affected, beating the January 2001
India blackout. It affected over 300 million people. The 31 July
2012 India blackout was the largest power outage in history.
The outage affected over 620 million people, about 9% of
the world population, or half of India's population, spread across
22 states in Northern, Eastern, and Northeast India. An
estimated 32 gigawatts of generating capacity was taken offline
in the outage.
The three-member investigation committee consisted of S. C.
Srivastava, A. Velayutham and A. S. Bakshi, and issued its
report on 16 August 2012. It concluded that four factors were
responsible for the two days of blackout.
It concluded that four factors were responsible for the two days
of blackout
Weak inter-regional power transmission corridors due to
multiple existing outages (both scheduled and forced);
High loading on 400 kV BinaGwaliorAgra link;
Inadequate response by State Load Despatch Centers
(SLDCs) to the instructions of Regional Load Despatch
Centres (RLDCs) to reduce overdrawal by the Northern
Region utilities and underdrawal/excess generation by the
Western Region utilities;
Loss of 400 kV BinaGwalior link due to mis-operation of its
protection system.
The committee also offered a number of recommendations to
prevent further failures, including an audit of the protection
systems

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