DocumentCode
1744631
Title
Birds, substations, and transmission
Author
Frazier, Sheila D.
Volume
1
fYear
2001
fDate
28 Jan-1 Feb 2001
Firstpage
355
Abstract
Birds have the dubious honor of causing more power system outages than any other animal. In addition to directly causing outages by wingtip contacts or nesting activities, they are indirectly responsible for many other animal-caused outages. Not only have birds been a problem since the first power systems were built, but many utilities have had little or no success in devising mitigating measures. Partly, this is due to a tendency to focus on the engineering side of the problem to the exclusion of the "bird" side of the problem. in other words, utilities tend to repair or replace damaged equipment with little or no idea of why the birds were there in the first place or what the probability of a re-occurrence might be. Without an adequate understanding of basic bird behavior, utilities may end up installing deterrents or protective devices that are neither the most effective nor the most appropriate. This paper briefly analyses the type of bird behaviour that causes problems in substations and transmission. The main problems are nesting birds, roosting birds, and large birds. Bird deterrents and equipment protection are also discussed in this paper
Keywords
power overhead lines; power system faults; protection; substations; bird deterrents; large birds; mitigating measures; nesting activities; outages; power system outages; protective devices; roosting birds; substations; transmission; wingtip contacts; Animals; Birds; Contamination; Electromagnetic compatibility; Energy management; Power system management; Power system protection; Project management; Sleep; Substations;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Power Engineering Society Winter Meeting, 2001. IEEE
Conference_Location
Columbus, OH
Print_ISBN
0-7803-6672-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PESW.2001.917061
Filename
917061
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