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    Editorials
    Friday, April 26, 2024

    Puerto Rico power failure

    This appeared in the New York Daily News

    As Puerto Rico works very slowly to restore power to the roughly 80% of the island that remains in the dark after getting smacked from Hurricane Fiona, it’s worth remembering that the “act of God” language often found in insurance and legal documents doesn’t tell the whole story. Yes, humankind is generally powerless to stop a storm from actually forming, but the extent of damage it does is a direct result of policy decisions and preparation.

    By that token, both the Puerto Rican and federal governments have failed the people of the island. Both before and after the ravages of Hurricane Maria five years ago, bad decisions have hamstrung the development of the more resilient energy grid that should’ve been non-negotiable in the 2017 storm’s wake.

    From the management of public utility PREPA failing to maintain transmission lines crisscrossing the island to the awarding of a crucial post-disaster contract to a tiny, unproven Montana company, the stage was set for Puerto Ricans to suffer. Fiona must stand as the final warning that the current ways that the power is generated and delivered are not built to withstand the reality of contemporary superstorms, which means in part that leadership must get serious about accelerating the transition toward renewable energies.

    This isn’t just because renewables are a better response to climate change, but because the main risks to Puerto Rican power are fuel — with the vast majority being natural gas and petroleum imported through ports, at the mercy of market shocks and supply chains — and transmission of power from plants to homes that might be miles away through rough terrain. Having a more varied system that’s less reliant on imports, say a mix of solar and wind projects, would go a long way to addressing the infrastructural problems that keep putting the island in the dark.

    For that to work, Washington and San Juan must accelerate disbursement of the billions the federal government had set aside for recovery projects, of which more than $22 billion remains unspent.

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