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Nova Scotia Power expects lengthy outages from Hurricane Fiona

Hundreds of thousands of Nova Scotians are without power amid high winds and rain as Hurricane Fiona arrived and officials warned that the lights, for some, might stay out for a long time.

Crews can't restore power if wind is 80 km/h or higher, company official says

CBC meteorologist Ryan Snoddon's Fiona forecast for Friday, Sept. 23

2 years ago
Duration 6:15
In his update for Friday evening ahead of the storm, Snoddon said Fiona was beginning to hook toward Nova Scotia.

Hundreds of thousands of Nova Scotians are without power amid high winds and rain as Hurricane Fiona arrived and officials warned that the lights, for some, might stay out for a long time.

Fionacould be "a Dorian-level event,"Nova Scotia Power storm lead Matt Drover told reporters earlier Friday, referring to the 2019 storm that knocked out electricity for some in the province for a week.

By 6 a.m. AT Saturday, there were more than 406,000Nova Scotia customers without power, according to the utility company's online outage map. That's almost 78 per cent of Nova Scotia Power's clients.

That figure dropped to 392,000 by 2 p.m.

Many of those outages were because of high winds and rain, according to the map. It said the power could be back on by Saturday for some, while others may need to wait until Wednesday.

High winds make it hard to restore power, Drover said.

"When the winds do get above [80 km/h], we will stand the buckets down," he said at a briefing Friday afternoon. "We can still get out and do assessments of what the damage may be, but we won't actually be able to get the buckets up in the air until the winds get below 80."

More than 800 Nova Scotia Power workers are in the field ready to restore power and "hundreds more behind the scenes [are] co-ordinating that effort," Drover said.

Most of Nova Scotia's power infrastructure is above ground, with more than half a million poles throughout the province,Drover said, though some are some underground.

"Especially in the province of Nova Scotia where there is a significant amount of rock in the ground, it is costly to install below-ground lines."

"And when outages do occur underground systems aren't outage-free when there are issues with those systems it can sometimes take longer to restore those outages, it takes a while to find where the problem is."

Even though crews won't be able to restore lines in very high winds, Drover encouraged people to report downed lines.

Avoid downed lines, report immediately

"If you see wires down, do not go anywhere near them," Drover said.

He said hospitals and public health areas would be the priority for restorations.

"And then we'll get into communities and sub-communities from there and individual houses at the end of the restoration," Drover said.

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