California’s Preemptive Blackout Portends a Dark Future

Climate change plays a role, but the power outages are chiefly the result of mismanagement — the kind we can no longer afford

Bryan Walsh
OneZero

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Photo: Josh Edelson/Getty Images

TThe millions of people currently affected by power outages in Central and Northern California are struggling with inconvenience and worse, but at least they can take comfort in the fact that they’re not alone. In 2017, the last year with concrete data, 36.7 million Americans were affected by power outages that lasted on average for a little less than eight hours.

These blackouts were caused by hurricanes and snowstorms, floods and severe winds. Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands suffered the longest-ever blackout in U.S. history following Hurricane Maria in 2017. By one estimate, blackouts cost Americans $150 billion a year and can directly lead to injuries and even deaths. And they’re getting worse. Thanks largely to a string of natural disasters, the average duration of power outages nearly doubled between 2016 and 2017.

What’s happening may signal a new normal in an increasingly hot and crowded world.

Given that background, the fact that hundreds of thousands of customers in California are likely to be without…

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Bryan Walsh
OneZero
Writer for

Journalist, author, dad. Former TIME magazine editor and foreign correspondent. Author of END TIMES, a book about existential risk and the end of the world.