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  2. Rolling blackout - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolling_blackout

    A room during load shedding at night in West Bengal, India. A rolling blackout, also referred to as rota or rotational load shedding, rota disconnection, feeder rotation, or a rotating outage, is an intentionally engineered electrical power shutdown in which electricity delivery is stopped for non-overlapping periods of time over different parts of the distribution region.

  3. Islanding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islanding

    In a power outage, the microgrid controller disconnects the local circuit from the grid on a dedicated switch and forces any online distributed generators to power the local load. [3] [4] Unintentional islanding is a dangerous condition that may induce severe stress on the generator, as the generator must match any changes in electrical load alone

  4. Load management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Load_management

    Capacity factor is a measure of the output of a power plant compared to the maximum output it could produce. Capacity factor is often defined as the ratio of average load to capacity or the ratio of average load to peak load in a period of time. A higher load factor is advantageous because a power plant may be less efficient at low load factors ...

  5. List of major power outages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_major_power_outages

    This is a list of notable wide-scale power outages. To be included, the power outage must conform to all of the following criteria: The outage must not be planned by the service provider. The outage must affect at least 1,000 people. The outage must last at least one hour. There must be at least 1,000,000 person-hours of disruption. For example:

  6. Loss of load - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loss_of_load

    Loss of load in an electrical grid is a term used to describe the situation when the available generation capacity is less than the system load. [1] Multiple probabilistic reliability indices for the generation systems are using loss of load in their definitions, with the more popular [2] being Loss of Load Probability (LOLP) that characterizes a probability of a loss of load occurring within ...

  7. Demand response - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demand_response

    When the loss of load happens (generation capacity falls below the load), utilities may impose load shedding (also known as emergency load reduction program, [23] ELRP) on service areas via targeted blackouts, rolling blackouts or by agreements with specific high-use industrial consumers to turn off equipment at times of system-wide peak demand.

  8. Dumsor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dumsor

    By early 2019, Ghanaians began to experience another wave of a controversial dumsor or load shedding, whose schedule was not published, despite the norm. [4] Ghana's Parliament was even divided on how to call it. This thus ushered in the term dumsaa: meaning off for a considerably long time or off all the time; [5] supposedly, a superlative ...

  9. List of bridge failures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bridge_failures

    In mid-2017 experts had issued warning that the bridge was too heavy. "The agency had mentioned that the vibrator index of the bridge was okay.... But it suggested shedding of load from the bridge as the structure beneath was carrying more load than it could bear," said a senior Bengal government official who was involved with the safety audit ...