Blackouts: a sociology of electrical power failure

Electricity fuels our existence. It powers water purification, waste, food, transportation and communication systems. Modern social life is impossible to imagine without it. This article looks at what happens when the power goes off. It scrutinises the causes and consequences of accidental electrical power cuts. It begins by identifying the reasons for power failure. In doing so, power generation systems are identified as critical infrastructures. They are more fragile than is commonly supposed, and the argument is made that they are getting frailer. Irrespective of cause, blackouts display similar effects. These social patterns are identified. They include measurable economic losses and less easily quantified social costs. Financial damage, food safety, crime, transport issues and problems caused by diesel generators are all discussed. This is more than a record of failures past. It is contended that blackouts are dress rehearsals for the future in which they will appear with greater frequency and greater severity. Increasing numbers of blackouts are anticipated due to growing uncertainties in supply and growing certainties in demand. Supply will become ever more precarious because of peak oil, political instability, infrastructural neglect, global warming and the shift to renewable energy resources. Demand will become stronger because of population growth, rising levels of affluence and the consumer ‘addictions’ which accompany this.

[1]  J. E. Groves,et al.  Made in America: Science, Technology and American Modernist Poets , 1989 .

[2]  Sang-Hyeok Gang,et al.  Report Card for America's Infrastructure , 2012 .

[3]  Paroma Sanyal,et al.  Powering Progress: Restructuring, Competition, and R&D in the U.S. Electric Utility Industry , 2009 .

[4]  D. L. Simms,et al.  Normal Accidents: Living with High-Risk Technologies , 1986 .

[5]  S. Havlin,et al.  The extreme vulnerability of interdependent spatially embedded networks , 2012, Nature Physics.

[6]  Stephan Schmid,et al.  energy [r]evolution - A sustainable world energy outlook , 2007 .

[7]  Emily Howard,et al.  The Ecological Rift: Capitalism's War on the Earth , 2012 .

[8]  R. Lamberts,et al.  Cooling exposure in hot humid climates: are occupants ‘addicted’? , 2010 .

[9]  Michael Sivak Will AC Put a Chill on the Global Energy Supply , 2013 .

[10]  Richard Gilbert,et al.  Transport Revolutions: Moving People and Freight Without Oil , 2007 .

[11]  P. N. Edwards Infrastructure and Modernity: Force, Time, and Social Organization in the History of Sociotechnical Systems , 2001 .

[12]  Gwyn Prins,et al.  On condis and coolth , 1992 .

[13]  E. Lerner,et al.  What's wrong with the electric grid? , 2014 .

[14]  M. Thring World Energy Outlook , 1977 .

[15]  David E. Nye,et al.  When the Lights Went Out: A History of Blackouts in America , 2010 .

[16]  Chungyoon Chun,et al.  Thermal diary : Connecting temperature history to indoor comfort , 2008 .

[17]  J. D. Hughes,et al.  Something New Under the Sun: An Environmental History of the Twentieth-Century World. By John R. McNeill. New York: W. W. Norton, 2000. Pp. xxvi, 42 1. $29.95. , 2000 .

[18]  D. Vuuren,et al.  Modeling global residential sector energy demand for heating and air conditioning in the context of climate change , 2009 .

[19]  J. Overhage,et al.  Sorting Things Out: Classification and Its Consequences , 2001, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[20]  Susan Leigh Star,et al.  Sorting Things Out: Classification and Its Consequences , 1999 .

[21]  Stephen Graham,et al.  Disrupted cities : when infrastructure fails , 2010 .

[22]  T. Misa,et al.  Modernity and Technology , 2002 .

[23]  C. Vasquez,et al.  Lights out? The outlook for energy in Eastern Europe and Central Asia , 2010 .

[24]  A. Auliciems,et al.  Airconditioning in Australia II—User Attitudes , 1988 .

[25]  G. DeFriese,et al.  The New York Times , 2020, Publishing for Libraries.

[26]  Michael A. McNeil,et al.  Future Air Conditioning Energy Consumption in Developing Countriesand what can be done about it: The Potential of Efficiency in theResidential Sector , 2007 .