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Cascade Natural Gas, other utilities asked Wash. customers to curtail use during gas storage plant outage, now resolved

Puget Sound Energy's Jackson Prairie gas storage plant
Puget Sound Energy/KLCC
Puget Sound Energy's Jackson Prairie gas storage plant

EUGENE, Ore. (KTVZ) -- Energy utilities in Washington and Oregon asked their customers to curtail gas and electricity usage on Saturday after the Northwest’s largest storehouse of natural gas shut down amid extreme cold temperatures, KLCC reported. The plant in Washington state is now back online.

A spokesperson for Puget Sound Energy, Washington’s largest utility, said Sunday afternoon it will keep asking customers to conserve as long as the region’s unusually cold weather continues.

On Saturday afternoon, Tulsa, Oklahoma-based Williams Companies, operator of the Northwest’s main natural gas pipeline, sent out an emergency notice: “Puget Sound Energy’s Jackson Prairie Storage facility has suffered a complete outage,” the station reported

The Jackson Prairie facility, about 10 miles south of Chehalis, Washington, stores more natural gas than any other site in the Pacific Northwest.

In sandstone layers more than 1,000 feet underground, it holds gas purchased in summer, when prices are low, for pumping into Williams' Northwest Pipeline in winter, when demand and prices are high.

With the need for heat and gas-fired electricity spiking during the region’s coldest temperatures in years, the volume of gas in the Northwest’s pipeline system on the I-5 corridor was dropping “at a rapid rate,” the company warned customers.

“Northwest requests all customers to take IMMEDIATE action to reduce loads on the system,” Williams’ notice stated.

Just before 7 p.m., Puget Sound Energy asked its customers to conserve gas and power that evening, blaming “extreme cold temperatures” and “higher energy use than forecasted” without mentioning the dwindling supply of gas entering the Northwest Pipeline.

“This evening, we’re asking customers to set their thermostats at a lower setting and limit the use of hot water, such as dishwashing or clothes washing, dryers and other appliances.”

Gas-fired power plants are the leading source of electricity for Puget Sound Energy, followed by hydropower and coal.

Other utilities in Washington and Oregon made similar asks of their customers, though some acknowledged the outage at Jackson Prairie as well as the weather.

In an interview on Sunday, PSE spokesperson Christina Donegan told KLCC she did not know how long Jackson Prairie’s output was stopped, but that it was up to 50-70% of capacity later that afternoon and up to full capacity “that evening.”

Donegan said the outage was caused by "redundant" fiber-optic cables that failed in extreme cold, though the cause of that failure was still being investigated.

Utilities including NW Natural, which serves 800,000 customers in Oregon and southwestern Washington, and Cascade Natural Gas, which serves 300,000 customers in Washington and Central and Eastern Oregon, told their customers on Sunday the crisis had passed. (CNG spokesman Mark Hanson said the messages to curtail use and of resolution only were sent to their customers in western Washington.)

“The issue with the natural gas storage facility has been resolved and operating conditions have returned to normal,” Cascade told its Washington customers. “Customers may resume normal usage.”

Puget Sound Energy customers, meanwhile, are still being asked to curtail their energy usage.

“We will be asking customers to continue to conserve into the evening and then tomorrow and really, as long as we're facing these unusually cold temperatures,” Donegan said.

Article Topic Follows: Business

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