Overwhelmed by demand, California’s power grid imposed rotating blackouts, while the coronavirus crisis created a dilemma for those who were unable to stay cool at home.

Heat rising off the pavement created the illusion of puddles near a high-tension power transmission line in the North Hollywood section of Los Angeles. Officials ordered rolling blackouts on Friday night and said continued scorching weather might make more shut-offs necessary. 
Heat rising off the pavement created the illusion of puddles near a high-tension power transmission line in the North Hollywood section of Los Angeles. Officials ordered rolling blackouts on Friday night and said continued scorching weather might make more shut-offs necessary. Credit…Richard Vogel/Associated Press

By Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs reports for The New York Times
Published Aug. 15, 2020 Updated Aug. 16, 2020, 12:00 p.m.

A heat wave rolling through the Southwest has forced intermittent power shut-offs in California, a state already struggling with wildfires and a recent surge in coronavirus cases, raising fears that the rising temperatures could turn deadly.

Californians used so much electricity to try and stay cool Friday night that the agency that oversees much of the state’s power grid declared an emergency and, for the first time in 19 years, shut off power to hundreds of thousands of customers for several hours to avoid a damaging overload.

There is little relief in sight. High temperatures above 100 degrees Fahrenheit are expected in Los Angeles every day through Friday. In parts of California and Arizona, thermometers are cracking 110. The National Weather Service issued an excessive heat warning for much of the West Coast, including parts of Oregon and Washington State and extending inland to Nevada, Utah and Arizona.

The sweltering heat comes as coronavirus cases are on the rise in California, which reported more than 65,000 new cases and about 950 related deaths over the past week. The health crisis may be deterring residents from gathering at cooling centers or at public places like malls and libraries, making people more susceptible to injury from the heat and driving up electricity demand, as those who have air-conditioners keep them running full blast.

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