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Energy
Hydro One invests more than $10 million for 230 kV wood pole structure replacements in Northwestern Ontario
TORONTO - Hydro One has completed more than half of the
pole and arm replacements scheduled on its 230 kV wood pole transmission
structures in Northwestern Ontario for this year.
Forty Hydro One workers, with the help of about 15 apprentices, replaced
poles and arms on 176 structures on the 230 kV power line from Atikokan to
Manitoba. An additional 120 wood pole structures located between Kenora,
Dryden and Fort Frances are also scheduled for replacement later this year.
Hydro One will invest approximately $10 million this year on the upgrades.
This investment is just a portion of the replacements planned in Northwestern
Ontario over the next five years.
"This project is part of an ongoing program to continually assess the
condition of our power system and make significant upgrades to improve overall
reliability," said Carmine Marcello, VP, Asset Management, Hydro One. "This
work is a reflection of Hydro One's proactive approach to monitoring and
improving the transmission system in the Province."
For this project, a new technique is being used to determine if
replacement of the structure is necessary. Each pole is tested by drilling
into an arm on the structure from a helicopter. A helicopter equipped with an
Airstair, a framework that attaches to the undercarriage of the helicopter and
allows for safe access to the transmission lines, is used to test and replace
poles.
Work on the line from Atikokan to Manitoba started on January 26, 2009
and finished on March 9, 2009. Across the province, approximately $254 million
is invested annually into replacing 115 and 230 kV wood pole power line
structures. Two Ontario-based companies are supplying the wood poles and steel
arms for this project.
Hydro One delivers electricity safely, reliably and responsibly to homes
and businesses across the province of Ontario and owns and operates Ontario's
29,000 km high-voltage transmission network that delivers electricity to large
industrial customers and municipal utilities, and a 122,000 km low-voltage
distribution system that serves about 1.3 million end-use customers and
smaller municipal utilities in the province. Hydro One is wholly owned by the
Province of Ontario.
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