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Title: Our electrical grid is an accident waiting to happen.
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.patriotheadquarters.com/hacking-the-grid/
Published: Jan 1, 2014
Author: Frank Bates
Post Date: 2014-01-01 12:24:42 by BTP Holdings
Keywords: None
Views: 342
Comments: 11

Our electrical grid is an accident waiting to happen.

In recent months, we’ve been told some things that patriots like us have long suspected. A report has recently been declassified that reveals that due to the U.S. electric grid’s old technology, lack of spare capacity and incapability of keeping pace with the increasing burden being placed upon it, the grid is vulnerable to a sophisticated physical assault that could produce catastrophic results.

Everyone has known for many years that the grid is vulnerable to extreme weather, including intense heat in the South, tornados in the heartland, hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico, and blizzards in the Northeast. I can’t remember the last time a month passed without a serious power outage occurring due to the weather.

Now we’re starting to learn a little more about why the grid is vulnerable to cyber attacks. As our power generation systems become more complex, they become more reliable. But at the same time, they become more vulnerable because as the design becomes more complex, the interactions between the components start to dominate the overall design.

The Wall Street Journal recently published an article titled, “Hacking the Grid ‘Is Very Easy.” The article points out that while the systems used to control industrial equipment such as turbines and other power-generation gear are supposed to be offline, they are actually often connected to the Internet and therefore exposed to cyber attacks. Meet you on the other side.

Reading this, you can see that computer security firm Mandiant Corporation blames China for a high percentage of the attacks on American corporations, organizations and government. Of course, China blames the U.S. for a vast majority of attacks on its computer systems.

As individuals, we know that the best way to become independent of the electrical grid is to power our homes with solar and wind energy. But the country still needs a reliable electrical grid. What do you believe the U.S. response should be to an electrical grid that is so old and so vulnerable? Fixing it would be very expensive, but wouldn’t those costs be worth it compared to the costs of repeated power outages? Please let me know what you think about this.


Poster Comment:

Every now and then, the power goes out here where I live. It usually comes back on in short order, but this is proof of what they re saying is true on here. ;)

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 6.

#1. To: BTP Holdings (#0)

The power goes out here periodically. It's because of storm winds blowing trees/ limbs down on the wires or some drunk driving into an electrical pole. The power also goes out when they shut it down for maintenance (to replace a transformer, for example).

Wind energy is not an option here in the Midwest. There is just not enough wind to generate more than $10 worth of power a month (proven in test sites). And solar is becoming less and less of an option with the chemtrails completely covering the sky.

ratcat  posted on  2014-01-01   15:47:52 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: ratcat (#1)

Cheap energy is within reach but they don't want cheap energy. There is a small nuclear power plant on the old McClellan AFB. Similar ones could be cheaply built and could easily provide power for neighborhoods.

farmfriend  posted on  2014-01-01   16:58:20 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: farmfriend, Ratcat (#2)

Nuclear power plant installations face strong NIMBY resistance particularly after the Fukushima disaster.

Studies have shown that wind energy is an inefficient unreliable source of renewable energy.

For California, solar energy might be the best way to go. Six large solar plants are planned for the Mojave, Sonoran and Colorado deserts of Southern California.

In December, 2010, several Native American Indian tribes sued the Bureau of Land Management for approving the construction of the solar facilities claiming this violated a MOU the BLM signed with the tribes previously and "arguing that the 6 solar plants would affect treasured geoglyphs, burial sites and relics."

articles.latimes.com/2011...la-me-solar-suit-20110224

In August, 2013 a district court ultimately ruled in favor of the BLM and dismissed the tribes' lawsuit.

elr.info/litigation/43/20...ry-committee-v-united-sta

Here's a cheery Nat'l Geographic article about one of the afore-mentioned solar plants that's been built in the Mojave Desert.

news.nationalgeographic.c...lar-energy-mojave-desert/

scrapper2  posted on  2014-01-01   18:22:29 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 6.

#7. To: scrapper2, ratcat, Cynicom (#6)

Yes people are stuck in the 70s and against nuclear power. As for not in their neighborhood, this one is urban and most don't know it is there. The news covered it briefly in reports of them e-raying the Folsom dam spill gates.

farmfriend  posted on  2014-01-01 19:00:16 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 6.

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