Gulf Power Meets Record Demand Due Cold Snap

January 10, 2014

As arctic air gripped Northwest Florida for three days, Gulf Power employees bundled up and powered up to help keep customers warm despite unprecedented electricity demand.

With the completion of several transmission system improvements as part of the largest grid construction program in the company’s history, Gulf Power was able to reach a record-setting energy demand of 2,694 megawatts of power early Tuesday. That means that Gulf Power provided more electricity to serve its customers’ needs than ever before. This surpassed the company’s all-time peak demand of 2,634 megawatts set in August 2007.

“The investments we have made in our system are paying off and will help even more to serve our customers and embrace growth in the future,” said Jeff Rogers, Gulf Power manager of Corporate Communications. “Our goal is to maintain our reliability even during these periods of high demand, and our employees worked as safely and quickly as possible through the weather to serve our customers, who are at the center of everything we do.”

System improvements — from Smart Grid technology to new transmission lines and rebuilt substations — helped ensure the grid remained stable to support the increased demand for electric service. Demand on a typical winter’s day for Gulf Power customers would be about 1,800 MW. One megawatt equals one million watts — about as much electricity needed to power a Super Walmart.

As cold weather was forecast Gulf Power worked with its sister utilities in the Southern Company system to prepare for the increased need for electricity. Gulf Power employees pitched in extra hours to bolster equipment at the power plants. Line crews worked through the nights to restore power as the cold weather pushed equipment on the smaller lines to their limits under unprecedented electrical loads.

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Comments

4 Responses to “Gulf Power Meets Record Demand Due Cold Snap”

  1. Larry on January 11th, 2014 7:41 am

    How about some appreciation to our local cooperative linemen for keeping the lights on during record cold!?! Gulf power met their demands with about an 8 hour overnight outage. EREC had outages, but did not leave their customers without heat through a 20 degree night. Props to Escambia River!

  2. Jane on January 11th, 2014 4:28 am

    Gulf Power tells us to save energy. We do. Then they raise the rates. The rate increase took most of the SSI 1.5% increase.

  3. fred on January 10th, 2014 3:21 pm

    Welcome to the south, where we explain electrical generating power in terms of a Walmart. You just gotta laugh sometimes…

  4. c.w. on January 10th, 2014 6:15 am

    Gulf Power is already getting themselves set up for another rate increase, and the PSC will eat it up. GP says, we are great and its all because of the upgrades. So they can get more money from the people. What GP needs is another company coming in and breaking up their monoply. Now there is nothing but GP so they can and do what ever they won’t.