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2015 Turkey blackout

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2015 Turkey power outage
Native name 2015 Türkiye Elektrik Kesintisi
Time31 March 2015 10:26:24 EET
Duration8 hours
Location81 provinces in Turkey
TypePower outage
CausePower line overload due to line maintenance
OutcomeMajor losses in everyday life, mainly in electricity-dependent jobs
Deathsunknown
Non-fatal injuriesunknown
Missingunknown
Property damageunknown
Publication bansnone

The 2015 Turkey blackout was a widespread power outage that occurred in almost all parts of Turkey in the morning of Tuesday, 31 March 2015.[1]

The Turkish electric authority regularly performs maintenance in the spring in preparation for high electricity demand during the summer. The spring rains also left hydropower plants in Eastern Turkey with a surplus of power, which is then exported to the population centers in Western Turkey.[2] At the time of the blackout, sufficiently many transmission lines and capacitor banks had been removed from service that the system was no longer in an (n-1)-secure state.[3] When the Osmanca – Kurşunlu line tripped, the remaining East-West connections failed.[2] The electric system in Turkey split in half at CET 09:36:11 and separated from the Central European (CE) synchronous zone, i.e. connecting lines to Greece and Bulgaria also tripped.[4] This was the reason that the disturbances only had effects in Turkey and did not cascade to neighbouring countries.

The two parts inside Turkey behaved differently. The Western part suffered from a lack generation (21%) and frequency went down. Load shedding schemes did stabilize the frequency, but as some power plants in Turkey did not cope with running at reduced frequency, additional power was lost and resulted in a blackout of the Western part. The Eastern part suffered from hydropower oversupply (41%) that wasn't able to flow westward.[5][6] The Eastern part was accelerated by ca. 1.6 Hz/s and culminated at 52.3 Hz. Power plants tripped due to overfrequency and the initially oversupplied Eastern part collapsed at underfrequency values less than 47.0 Hz.

At 16:12 (CET) - ca. 6.5 hours after the blackout - the Western and Eastern part were resynchronised, while the Turkish grid was already about 80% energized. At 18:30 almost 95% of the loads were served again.

References

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  1. ^ "Turkey's power outage linked to mismanagement, grid director resigns". DailySabah. 6 April 2015. Archived from the original on 10 April 2015. Retrieved 2 September 2017.
  2. ^ a b ENTSOE, Report on Blackout in Turkey on 31 March 2015, 21 September 2015
  3. ^ Velay, Maxime; Vinyals, Meritxell; Besanger, Yvon; Retière, Nicolas (September 2018). An analysis of large-scale transmission power blackouts from 2005 to 2016 (PDF). 53rd International Universities Power Engineering Conference. Glasgow. p. 8541901. doi:10.1109/UPEC.2018.8541901. HAL hal-02330748.
  4. ^ "Explained: How 76 million people were hit by Turkey's worst blackout since 1999". Hürriyet Daily News. 2 April 2015. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
  5. ^ Sabadus, Aura (16 April 2015). "Turkey's blackout caused by line maintenance, hydro production oversupply". www.icis.com. Retrieved 2 September 2017.
  6. ^ "Turkey's 10-Hour Blackout Shows Threat to World Power Grids". Bloomberg.com.