Chances are you've lost power during a storm at some time in your life. It's an inconvenience that Duke Energy, the states largest serving utility company, is trying to prevent.
"One of the ways we do that is through self-healing technology. It automatically detects power outages. It reroutes power to restore power to customers in the event of an outage," McKenzie Barbknecht said.
Duke Energy Spokesperson, Barbknecht, says the company is adding "self-healing" technology to different parts of the state. Upgrades are currently being made to power grids in Noblesville.
If the lights go out, the system will automatically detect that and re-route the power through a different line.
"It works very similar to how a GPS in your car works. It identifies an accident ahead and re-routes. Self-healing works the same way. If a tree takes out a power line, instead of knocking out power for thousands of customers, it isolates the outage to mid-area," Barbknecht said.
According to Barbknecht, only 11% of customers are protected by this high technology. Plans are in place to upgrade the grids for 65% of Duke Energy customers over the next six years.
"Last year, our self-healing technology helped avoid nearly 45,000 outages across the state, which saved 80,000 hours of outage time. Those are significant numbers. When you couple that with some other upgrades we are making to our system, like swapping out wooden poles for steel poles, all of that goes a long way in making sure the lights stay on," she said.
AES serves the Indianapolis area. It's also using self-healing technology.
Plans are in place over the next 7 years to significantly strengthen its grids.
-
Delphi Murders Trial: Day 12 | Prosecution rests. Defense calls two witnesses.
Expert telephone voice witness tells jurors the voice of "Bridge Guy" is that of Richard Allen. The prosecution rested, and the defense team for Richard Allen called its first two witnesses.Franciscan Health and Riley Hospital NICU babies share Halloween spirit
Franciscan Health Indianapolis and Riley Hospital NICU babies are in the Halloween spirit this year. Both hospitals sent WRTV photos of the the babies in their tiny costumes.ISP: Crash on I-465 leaves one dead
According to INDOT, the crash occurred between W. Minnesota St. and W. Washington St. Indiana State Police confirmed that one person died.Late patient receives tribute from favorite band with help from hospital teacher
Keyauna West passed away from a rare blood condition in January. She dreamed of using her Make-A-Wish to see her favorite rock band "Pearl jam" and meet its members.