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Page 1: King Fire NWHA charts

Powering forward. Together.

King Fire Impacts on SMUD Hydro OperationsGrant Nelson, Sacramento Municipal Utility District

17 February, 2015

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• UARP description• King Fire statistics• King Fire impacts on

SMUD hydro operations

• Mitigation of fire impacts

• Costs• Lessons learned

Agenda

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King Fire Statistics• Started by arsonist on

September 13, 2014– 100% containment on

October 9• Over 97,700 acres burned• Records set:

– Fifteen mile spread in 6 hours– 23% of burn area suffered

high soil burn severity– 210,000 gallons of retardant

dropped in one day– >8,000 personnel at peak

• From as far as Florida and Minnesota

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King Fire Statistics, continued• 21,000 homes threatened• Twelve homes destroyed• 2,830 people evacuated• Twelve firefighters injured• Over 640,000 total

gallons of retardant used• 329-miles of fire line cut• Five SMUD employees

evacuated from their homes

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Daily Fire Progression Fire Grew

50,000 Acres on Sept.17

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Soil Burn Severity

23% of Burn Area Suffered High Soil Burn Severity.Was 7% for the Rim Fire

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VegetationBasalMortality

47% of Fire Area Suffered >90% Mortality

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Pyrocumulus Cloud from Sacramento, 60+ Miles Away

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Camino Penstock Vicinity

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Fire Impacts to UARP• Wood poles burned on 4 kV

feeder line to Brush Creek• Loss of station service power

due to transmission shutdown

• Debris flows and erosion• Fiber optic and conductors

on penstock damaged

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Fire Impacts to UARP, continued• Communication link to

remote gauging stations lost– Daily manual compliance

reads required• Mandatory evacuation of

hydro O&M facility– Critical equipment relocated

prior to evacuation • Increased post-fire traffic on

narrow, winding area roads– SMUD– Contractors– USFS Temporary antenna for gauging telemetry

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Fire Impacts to UARPJaybird Powerhouse

Access Road After First Rain

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Fire Impacts to UARP

Fiber Optic/Power Cables on Penstock

Fallen Tree Takes Out Gauging Station Communication System

(Propane Tanks Survive!)

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Replacing Burned Out Power and Fiber

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Slab Creek Reservoir Drainage

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Camino Adit Road

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Erosion Rills Forming

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Transmission Right of Way40 acres of trans-mission RoW was used as afire break

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Hazard Tree Removal on RoW~One million board feet of timber being removed

Fire caused no damage to transmission system

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Natural Recovery In Process

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Mitigation Efforts

• SMUD has entered into a Collection Agreement with Forest Service for Helimulching– Chopped weed-free straw applied by helicopter– Slopes from 15% to 60% with high burn intensity

to be treated – Treatment of approximately 250 acres in Brush

Creek Drainage– Projected reduction in sediment yield is 6000 tons

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Mitigation Efforts, continued• Hazard tree removal

– Along transmission RoW– Adjacent to SMUD facilities– Behind SMUD gates

• Transmission RoW fire line reseeded– Seed mixture approved by the Forest Service

• Roadside ditches and culverts cleaned after each storm

• Forest Service Burned Area Emergency Response (BAER) Team performed drainage improvements along selected roads

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SMUD’s Recovery Costs

Scope Cost ($)Hazard Tree Removal $1,565,000Fiber and 4 kV Line Replacement $1,002,000Penstock fiber and cable replacement $380,000Road Clearing $86,000Transmission Related Costs $535,000Helimulching $360,000Other $350,000Total $4,478,000

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• Expand upon FERC-required EAP requirements to include disasters beyond dam failure

• Be prepared to operate from remote location(s)• Prepare contingency plans for

– Trapped personnel– Non-functioning generation and/or

transmission– O&M facility evacuation

• Have alternate staging area for key personnel and equipment

Lessons Learned

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• Ensure all personnel contact info is current• Train ICP/EOC liaisons

– Incident Command System familiarity– Company protocols and procedures– Facility familiarity including transmission and

feeder lines – Familiarity with local OES personnel

Lessons Learned, continued

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• The King Fire was devastating and record-setting

• Fortunately, no loss of human life

• All things considered, impact to SMUD not too severe

Conclusions