Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro says a major generator is out of service for the winter, raising the prospect of rotating blackouts if demand for power can’t be managed.
One of three generators at the main Holyrood generating plant was damaged in an intense blizzard earlier this month.
Jim Haynes, vice-president of regulated operations, says the company can usually meet power demand in winter with two generators and other power sources.
But as a precaution, he says Hydro may ask residential and commercial customers to cut use at peak times.
Highest demand is usually on cold, windy days between 6 a.m. and 9 a.m., and between 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. from December to March.
Haynes says if demand can’t be reduced through conservation, the company will work with Newfoundland Power to rotate short blackouts at peak times.






Have you talked to anyone who buys data communications services in quantity since the Persona cable was installed ? The Province has recovered the $10 Million investment all ready due to increased competition in the telecom industry that lowered access prices. There will never be a need to actually use the fibers that are owned by the province because Bell Aliant no longer has a monopoly on transmission across the Gulf of St Lawrence (or across the Island). The same technical advances that make FibreOp feasible also increase the capacity of most optical cables by hundreds of times (Wave Division Multiplexing).