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Power Failures Hit Millions in India

NEW DELHI — About 600 million people lost power in India on Tuesday when the country’s northern and eastern electricity grids failed, crippling the country for a second consecutive day.

The outage stopped hundreds of trains in their tracks, darkened traffic lights, shuttered the Delhi Metro and left nearly everyone — the police, water utilities, private businesses and citizens — without electricity. About half of India’s population of 1.2 billion people was without power. India’s unofficial power grid, a huge number of backup diesel generators and other private power sources, kept hospitals electrified and major airports running.

Manoranjan Kumar, an economic adviser with the Ministry of Power, said in a telephone interview that the grids had failed and that the ministry was working to figure out the source of the problem. The northern and eastern grids cover 11 states and the capital city of Delhi, stretching from India’s northern tip in Kashmir to Rajasthan to West Bengal’s capital of Kolkata.

The failure happened without warning just after 1 p.m., electric company officials said.

“We seem to have plunged into another power failure, and the reasons why are not at all clear,” said Gopal K. Saxena, the chief executive of BSES, an electric company that services South Delhi, in a telephone interview. It may take a long time to restore power to north India, he said, because the eastern grid has also failed, and alternate power sources in Bhutan and the Indian state of Sikkim flow into the east first.

About two hours after the grid failure, power ministry authorities said some alternate arrangements had been made. “We are taking hydro power from Bhakhra Nangal Dam,” in northern India, said Sushil Kumar Shinde, the power minister, in a televised interview.

India has struggled to generate enough power of its own to fuel businesses and light homes, and the country relies on huge imports of coal and oil to power its own plants. But supply and demand may not explain away this week’s grid failures, power executives said.

The failure on Tuesday affected roughly twice as many people as the massive power outage the previous day, when the northern power grid failed and left more than 300 million people without power for several hours. No official reason for the Monday’s failure has been given, although some local news reports pointed fingers at state governments which were overdrawing power.

That assessment is too simplistic, Mr. Saxena, of BSES, said. There are controls in place on India’s electricity grids that override an outsized power demand. “We have one of the most robust, smart grids operating” in the world, he said. It would “not be wise” to give an assessment of what happened at this time, he added.

Institutions without a private backup system were shuttered. All trains stopped in the Delhi Metro, which carries nearly 2 million passengers a day. Trains were pulled to the closest stations using battery back up, and then evacuated, a spokeswoman for the Delhi Metro said, and the stations have been locked. “We had never anticipated such a thing,” the spokeswoman said.

A trade body, the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India, or Assocham, said that Monday’s power problem “totally disturbed the normal life and has severely impacted the economic activities.”

“While on the one hand it is pity that over 26,000 megawatts of power stations are idle due to the nonavailability of coal, on the other one grid failure has brought the system collapsed,” said the group’s secretary general D.S. Rawat, noting that “the entire power situation at present is headed for disaster.”

Niharika Mandhana and Hari Kumar contributed to this story from New Delhi.

 

Powergrid

 

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On This Day: July 31

Updated July 30, 2012, 2:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On July 31, 1964, the American space probe Ranger 7 transmitted pictures of the moon’s surface.

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On July 31, 1919, Primo Levi, the Italian writer and chemist whose work was influenced by his captivity at Auschwitz, was born. Following his death on April 11, 1987, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1777 The Marquis de Lafayette, a 19-year-old French nobleman, was made a major-general in the American Continental Army.
1875 Andrew Johnson, the 17th president of the United States, died in Carter Station, Tenn., at age 66.
1914 The New York Stock Exchange closed due to the outbreak of World War I. (Trading didn’t resume until December.)
1919 Germany’s Weimar Constitution was adopted.
1972 Democratic vice-presidential candidate Thomas Eagleton withdrew from the ticket with George McGovern following disclosures that Eagleton had once undergone psychiatric treatment.
1977 The “Son of Sam” killer claimed his last victims when he shot and killed Stacy Moskowitz, 20, and seriously wounded her date as they sat in a parked car in Brooklyn, N.Y. (David Berkowitz was arrested less than two weeks later. He is serving six sentences of 25 years to life.)
1981 A seven-week strike by major league baseball players ended.
1990 Nolan Ryan became the 20th major league pitcher to win 300 games as his Texas Rangers beat the Milwaukee Brewers 11-3.
1995 Walt Disney Co. agreed to acquire Capital Cities-ABC Inc. in a $19 billion deal.
2007 The U.N. Security Council unanimously approved a 26,000-strong peacekeeping force for Sudan’s Darfur region.
2008 Scientists reported the Phoenix spacecraft had confirmed the presence of frozen water in Martian soil.
2009 Three American tourists were arrested by Iran on suspicion of espionage during what their families have said was a simple hiking trip along the Iraq-Iran border. (One was released on bail, the others remain in Iranian custody.)

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

J.K. Rowling, Author (“Harry Potter” books)

Author J.K. Rowling (“Harry Potter” books) turns 47 years old today.

AP Photo/Joel Ryan

DeMarcus Ware, Football player

Dallas Cowboys linebacker DeMarcus Ware turns 30 years old today.

AP Photo/Sharon Ellman

1919 Robert Morgenthau, Former Manhattan district attorney, turns 93
1944 Geraldine Chaplin, Actress, turns 68
1945 William Weld, Former Massachusetts governor, turns 67
1951 Evonne Goolagong Cawley, Tennis Hall of Famer, turns 61
1956 Deval Patrick, Governor of Massachusetts, turns 56
1958 Bill Berry, Rock musician (R.E.M.), turns 54
1962 Wesley Snipes, Actor, turns 50
1963 Fatboy Slim, Rock musician, turns 49
1975 Annie Parisse, Actress (“Law and Order”), turns 37
1978 Zac Brown, Country singer, musician, turns 34
1979 B.J. Novak, Actor, writer (“The Office”), turns 33

 

Historic Birthdays

Primo Levi 7/31/1919 – 4/11/1987 Italian-Jewish writer and chemist.Go to obituary »
59 Augustus 7/31/1526 – 2/12/1586
Elector of Saxony & leader of Protestant Germany
62 George Baxter 7/31/1804 – 1/11/1867
English engraver and printer
79 Jane Currie Hoge 7/31/1811 – 8/26/1890
American welfare worker & fundraiser for the Union
80 Abram Stevens Hewitt 7/31/1822 – 1/18/1903
American industrialist & philanthropist who became mayor of N. Y. C.
76 Henri Brisson 7/31/1835 – 4/11/1912
French statesman who was twice premier of France
77 Richard Dixon Oldham 7/31/1858 – 7/15/1936
English geologist who discovered evidence of the Earth’s Core
99 S. S. Kresge 7/31/1867 – 10/18/1966
American merchant who started a chain of 1,000 variety stores
87 Jacques Villon 7/31/1875 – 6/9/1963
French painter and printmaker & brother of Marcel Duchamp
70 Elmo Roper 7/31/1900 – 4/30/1971
American who developed political forecasting by polls
49 Whitney Young 7/31/1921 – 3/11/1971
American civil rights leader & head of the National Urban League