Storm Center > Hurricane Laura Restoration Update - 9/3/20 @ 8:30 a.m.

Hurricane Laura Restoration Update - 9/3/20 @ 8:30 a.m.

09/03/2020

Orange, Texas
Orange, Texas

Entergy’s Hurricane Laura information website provides customers with storm restoration and recovery updates. Visit the site at entergy.com/hurricanelaura.

Our damage assessments indicate catastrophic damage to our electrical infrastructure. We expect the recovery to be as difficult and challenging as we have ever faced in the past.

Our restoration workers have restored 81% of the electrical power outages caused by Hurricane Laura. Our workforce will continue its safe, quick work until everyone’s power is restored.

Outage and restoration information 8:20 a.m. included:

 

Current Outages

Peak Outages

Restored

% Restored

Arkansas

0

47,500

 47,500

100%

Louisiana

108,448

270,900

 162,452

60%

Mississippi

0

6,300

 6,300

100%

Texas

9,373

291,300

 281,927

97%

System

117,821

616,000

 498,179

81%

Entergy’s distribution and transmission systems have suffered extensive damage. Key transmission lines are out of service that will affect restoration until they return. 

Systemwide damage includes:

  • Distribution: 9,760 poles, 3,729 transformers and 18,706 spans of wire damaged.
  • Substations: 292 impacted.
  • Transmission: 219 lines out of service.

Remaining Laura-related outages in Texas will be restored Sept. 4. Restoration continues for customers in Louisiana, but those in Lake Charles and in Cameron and Calcasieu parishes face weeks without electrical power.

Transmission

The damage from Hurricane Laura’s historic intensity caused catastrophic damage to the Entergy system across Louisiana and Texas. The eye wall, which brings the most damaging winds and intense rainfall, passed directly over Lake Charles, Louisiana, causing wide-spread damage to that area and our system.

The transmission system is the backbone of the electric grid and helps Entergy move power from the power plant to the lines serving customers’ neighborhoods. These large lines are like the interstate system. Without these lines in service, it makes it difficult to move power across the system to customers in the affected areas.

Power must be restored to transmission lines and substations in order to energize the distribution lines that serve businesses and homes. We must patrol and inspect each component of the high voltage facilities before they can be re-energized.

If the grid and the flow of power were compared to our highway system, transmission lines would be the interstates, substations would be the off-ramps, and distribution lines would be the streets and roads that lead to homes and businesses.

Laura’s damage to Entergy’s transmission system has surpassed that of Hurricane Gustav that hit Louisiana and Hurricane Ike that hit Texas in 2008.

The transmission structure that supports a 500,000-volt line weighs roughly 40,000 pounds. Transporting just one requires three 18-wheeler trucks. For comparison, one 18-wheeler can transport about 50-100 distribution poles.

Even as we work to rebuild the transmission system, our power generation and transmission groups are working on a plan to provide power to some parts of the area despite the damaged transmission system.

Louisiana Update

Severe transmission system damage in and around Lake Charles and in Cameron and Calcasieu parishes prevents bringing power into the area.

All nine transmission lines that deliver power into the Lake Charles area, seven of which belong to Entergy, are out of service. All seven have been catastrophically damaged. Assessments are complete, and the damage is some of the most severe the company has experienced.

For customers to begin receiving power in the Lake Charles area, the transmission lines must be rebuilt. Those that received major damage may need to be fully reconstructed in parts. Once the transmission lines are flowing electricity into the city’s substations, then power can flow through the distribution lines to homes and businesses that are able to accept power. Entergy Louisiana expects to energize the first of its transmission lines into Lake Charles in mid-September.

For the Lake Charles area, our first and most critical priority is to re-energize the first transmission source to begin the process of starting available generation units in the area. We have several options that we are currently evaluating based on feasibility and time to execute.

  • With this first source energized, the priority is to reenergize other transmission facilities required to restart power generation sources within the Lake Charles area, including Calcasieu Plant and Lake Charles Power Station. These generating sources will allow Entergy Louisiana to power essential services and facilities critical to public health and safety, as well as some customers.
  • Hurricane Laura damaged some of our power plants in the Lake Charles area. Work continues to repair and make the plants ready to generate power for customers.

The company expects it will be mid-September before power is available to customers in the Lake Charles area who can safely receive it. Restoring power will take longer to customers in inaccessible areas of the region.

Initial estimates indicated it will take weeks to rebuild all transmission lines in Calcasieu and Cameron parishes. Until that work is completed, resumption of normal service could be limited.

Although the power grid in southwest Louisiana will lack the redundancies that are in place when the transmission system is in full operation, Entergy Louisiana’s engineering and operations teams are developing a plan to maintain the stability of the system.

A breakdown of the damaged infrastructure in southwest Louisiana includes more than 1,000 transmission structures, 6,637 broken poles, 2,926 transformers and 338 miles of downed distribution wire.

The statewide breakdown of distribution system damages includes 8,437 poles, 3,434 transformers and 463 miles of downed wire.

We have thousands of restoration workers in Lake Charles and the Cameron and Calcasieu parishes area. Our logistics team continues acquiring hotel rooms and mobile sleeping units to house and feed the thousands of restoration workers helping restore service for our customers. Some workers in southeast Texas will be redirected to southwest Louisiana, riding on buses to and from the work areas.

Crews will continue restoring transmission lines, substations and the distribution system that feed homes and businesses. The company is aggressively exploring other opportunities to jump-start the power flow in Lake Charles by enabling generators located in the city to begin producing electricity without the need for a transmission source to provide external power needed to generate power.

We have made great progress restoring customers in north Louisiana. Crews are expected to restore all customers in north Louisiana who can safely take power by Sept. 4. In the Jennings area, all customers who can safely take power have been restored.

We use peak outages, which measure a moment in time, to indicate our restoration progress. Over the course of the storm and our restoration, the company has restored 352,470 individual outages in Louisiana as of 7 a.m. Sept. 3.

Texas Update

Six of the nine major transmission lines that help power Entergy Texas customers are currently out of service as a result of significant storm damage to multiple structures and spans of conductor. Four of these major lines bring power to or from Louisiana. A good number of the transmission structures within these lines were damaged beyond repair and require complete replacement.

Moving forward, Entergy’s focus is on repairing the catastrophic damage to the transmission system across southeast Texas and southwest Louisiana, which together provide power to the eastern portion of Texas.

The transmission system plays a critical role in delivering power from the power plant to the lines serving customers’ neighborhoods. The damage from Hurricane Laura has eliminated much of the redundancy built into the transmission system, which makes it difficult to move power around the region to customers. These conditions, along with increasing demand due to higher temperatures, can result in an imbalance of supply and demand for electricity.

While these transmission structures are being repaired, Entergy Texas’ engineering and operations groups are working closely, along with our reliability coordinator MISO, to ensure the safe and stable operation of the electric grid.

Due to level of destruction to system caused by Hurricane Laura, customers remaining without power in Port Arthur, Nederland, Port Neches, Groves area will be restored today.

Given the extent of damage, these times may change as our make progress restoring customers. However, we expect to restore most of the remaining customers in the Orange area who can safely take power by Friday.

Crews have found more than 1,000 downed distribution poles, more than 200 blown transformers and approximately 380,000 feet of downed wire. In addition, 37 Entergy Texas substations and 63 transmission lines in Texas were impacted.

Resources

Our crews, contractors and mutual-assistance partners are working long hours restoring service to customers as safely and as quickly as possible. We have pulled in people from all over the country to work long hours in a very unforgiving climate. Even for our team members used to working in this environment, it is exceptionally hot and taxing.

Our restoration force of 23,200 workers includes our own employees, contractors and mutual assistance crews from other companies. This is the largest restoration effort we have ever mobilized, and its size will fluctuate as we complete restoration in some areas and relocate our workers.

  • An Entergy storm team of 8,300 and growing is on the ground in southwest Louisiana to rebuild a power grid severely damaged by Hurricane Laura’s 150 mph sustained winds.
  • More than 6,000 workers have converged on Jefferson and Orange counties to complete restoration efforts. These crews are working to repair significant damage to Entergy Texas’ system.

Restoration workers from 29 states are restoring service for our customers. Donor states include Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Mississippi, North Carolina, New Jersey, New Mexico, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Wisconsin and West Virginia.

Customer Information

Given the intensity of this storm and the additional need for our crews to follow COVID-19 precautionary measures, hardest hit areas may experience outages for weeks. In addition, restoration may be hampered by blocked access or other obstacles.

Customers who have a new advanced meter installed can check to see if their power is restored by logging into myEntergy. View “My Usage” on the dashboard. Select “hourly view” to see their most recent usage which is updated every four to five hours.

Customers with property damage may require special action to speed their restoration:

  • If your property has water damage, turn off the electricity at either the main fuse box or circuit breaker. Don’t step in water to get to the fuse box or circuit breaker.
  • Call a licensed electrician for advice when necessary. A licensed electrician’s inspection of your property’s electric wiring may be needed before Entergy can restore power to a home or business that has water damage from rain or flooding.

For customers without property damage:

  • Property owners without hurricane damage should be cautious.
  • Look for electrical system damage once power is restored. If you see sparks, broken or frayed wires, or the smell of hot insulation is noticeable, turn off the electricity at either the main fuse box or circuit breaker.
  • Call a licensed electrician for advice when necessary. Don’t step in water to get to the fuse box or circuit breaker.

Entergy cannot restore power to a location with a damaged meter base, conduit or weather head (the metal pipe extending upward from the structure with electrical cables inside). They must be repaired by a qualified electrician before Entergy can restore power.

Responding to a major storm and COVID-19 could affect our response:

  • Along with standard storm preparations, Entergy employees are navigating the COVID-19 pandemic by taking additional steps. These include traveling separately when possible, adjusting crew staging locations and increasing the use of drones.
  • Due to the additional measures crews must take, restoration may take longer, especially where there are widespread outages. Additionally, crews will continue to practice social distancing and we ask that customers do the same. For their safety and yours, please stay away from work zones.

For our industrial customers, restoration priority is to power critical community services such as fire, police, hospitals and water and communication services. As we restore service to residential, commercial and industrial customers, we must do it in a way that balances the needs of our customers with the ability to support additional load as the system permits.

Stay Informed

  • We know you want information about your outage. Given the intensity of this storm and the additional need for our crews to follow COVID-19 precautionary measures, hardest hit areas may experience outages for weeks. In addition, restoration may be hampered by flooding, blocked access or other obstacles.
  • In addition to disruption of normal business operations, customers may experience delays when calling our telephone centers, especially from unaffected areas, due to overloading of the system with outage calls. We encourage customers to use these other means to interact with us during restoration:
    • Download our free app for your smartphone at entergy.com/app.
    • Sign up for text alerts by texting REG to 36778 and have your account number and ZIP code handy. The registration pattern is as follows including spaces: REG (account number) (ZIP code). Once registered, text OUT to 36778 to report an outage. You can also report an outage online as a guest.
    • Visit the Entergy Storm Center website and our View Outages.
    • Follow us on Twitter.com/entergy or Facebook.com/entergy.
    • Call us at 800-9OUTAGE (1-800-968-8243).
    • Follow updates in your local news media, like radio, television and newspapers.
    • Once these storms pass, we can fully assess the damage and will have more information to share.

Unfortunately, we are seeing an increase in attempts to scam our customers following Hurricane Laura.

  • Entergy never demands immediate payment from customers over the phone. You shouldn't give your personal information to strangers.
  • If a call sounds suspicious, hang-up and call 1-800-ENTERGY (1-800-368-3749) to speak directly with an Entergy customer service representative. 
  • If you believe you are a victim of this scam, notify the proper authorities, such as the local police or the state attorney general's office.

Customer Safety

  • You should stay safe as we restore service outages caused by Hurricane Laura.
  • There is no way to know if a downed line is energized or not, so if you see one, keep your distance and call 1-800-9OUTAGE (1-800-968-8243).
  • Stay safe and away from downed power lines and flooded areas. Do not walk in standing water and do not venture into areas of debris, since energized and dangerous power lines may not be visible.
  • Customers choosing to use portable electric generators should do so in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions. Customers must never connect a generator directly to a building’s wiring without a licensed electrician disconnecting the house wiring from Entergy’s service. Otherwise, it can create a safety hazard for the customer or our linemen working to restore power. And it may damage the generator or the house wiring.
  • Restoration workers who discover a generator attached directly to Entergy’s system will work with the customer to disconnect the generator. As a last resort, the restoration worker will disconnect the customer’s service connection to Entergy, which may take an extended time to reconnect due to the extensive restoration effort underway.

Storm restoration photos and videos


Corporate Editorial Team