Hawaiian Electric advances Wildfire Safety Strategy, expands grid resilience work
Hawaiian Electric today announced actions it is taking as part of its Wildfire Safety Strategy, particularly in drought-stricken areas at elevated risk for wildfires.
Hawaiian Electric today announced actions it is taking as part of its Wildfire Safety Strategy, particularly in drought-stricken areas at elevated risk for wildfires.
Hawaiian Electric expects to restore power to about 70% of its customers in downtown Honolulu tonight.
Hawaiian Electric crews are continuing to respond to scattered outages to restore approximately 1,500 customers in parts of Kula, Pukalani, Haiku, Maui Meadows, Wailuku, and Lahaina. While crews are working as quickly as possible and additional field crews from Oahu have joined restoration efforts to bring customers back online, restoration is taking time and all affected customers are being asked to prepare for a possible extended overnight outage.
Hawaiian Electric crews continue to restore electric service to customers impacted by the storm system that is affecting the state.
Even as repairs progress, much of downtown Honolulu is likely to remain without power tonight, with full restoration taking until Wednesday morning.
Hawaiian Electric crews worked throughout the night to restore service to customers in downtown Honolulu and Chinatown and were able to repair one of three transformers damaged by flooding.
Hawaiian Electric crews are working overnight to restore electric service to hundreds of customers in downtown Honolulu and Chinatown, but because of the continued heavy rains power will not be restored until tomorrow morning at the earliest.
Gusty winds and fallen trees damaged sections of the island’s transmission and distribution system, causing power outages mostly in the southern portion of Hawaii Island.
Hawaiian Electric crews are working to restore electric service to about 5,600 customers in Upcountry Maui and pockets of Kuau, Haiku and Lahaina currently impacted by the storm system that continues to affect the state.
Since Sunday, an estimated 20,000 customers experienced brief to extended power outages caused by gusty winds and fallen trees on the island's transmission and distribution system.
Hawaiian Electric is beginning the procurement for projects to provide customers on Molokai and Lanai the opportunity to participate in a shared solar program (also known as community-based renewable energy) on their island to further reduce use of imported fossil fuels and cut carbon emissions.