Skip to main content

Improve Your Experience

You are using a browser version that we do not support. Please use one of these supported browsers:

Behind the Meter

power meter

Learn more about the PUD and what we do, how we do it and why, as well as get some tips on conserving energy and staying safe around electricity.    

Selected Story


 

During certain types of weather events, we often expect outages. But what actually causes equipment to fail when Mother Nature roars? Here are a few examples (although not an exhaustive list).

Rain

Heavy rain mixed with dust can get inside unknowingly cracked insulators (which hold the wires on top of the poles). The electricity then “tracks,” meaning it moves along the wet, dirty wooden crossarm to a good ground source (ground wire or guy wire) until it catches the pole on fire. Similarly, an osprey (or other large bird) will drop sticks and conductive debris to build a nest between wires. When the nest gets wet it can conduct electricity and cause a fire – this is a big reason why we often relocate large nests, for both safety of the animals and reliability of the system.

It may seem odd to say that rain causes fires, but that’s often the case because the dirty water conducts electricity very well.

Wind

Aside from the common tree or branch broken in the wind and falling on lines, other things can de-energize lines, too. We’ve seen nests, kites, tarps, roofing, orchard foil, trampolines or other unsecured items cause outages. This is one of the reasons it’s important to keep poles and lines clear.

Ice/Snow

Picture that frosty buildup on a metal pole that you would never put your tongue on – it builds up on our wires and other infrastructure, too. This “ice loading” can snap our wires under its weight, or make them extremely fragile if something else hits them (like a tree branch). Some ice and snow is ok – the lines can take it. But too much, especially on older lines, can cause failures. Heavy ice loading mixed with wind is a bad combination.

More News Articles

Aside from our more popular energy efficiency incentive programs for homes and businesses, we also have agricultural and industrial incentive…

If you are a PUD customer and would like to increase the energy efficiency of your business, we have incentive programs available that could help…

If you are a PUD customer and interested in making your home more energy efficient, we have incentives available.

Your primary source of…

While you are at home and may be concerned about energy usage, you can do a basic energy audit to identify problem areas. You can then make…

Project Help is a long-time program at Okanogan County PUD, funded entirely by donations from our customers. The fund goes to customers…

Did you know that Okanogan County PUD does not generate any of its own power? We buy all the power that we sell to our customers – and it’s nearly…