The 2005 Java–Bali Blackout was a power outage across Java and Bali on 18 August 2005, affecting some 100 million people.[1]
Impact
editPower went off at around 10:23 am (UTC+7) on 18 August 2005 across most areas of the two islands. Jakarta lost power completely, along with Banten and Special Region of Yogyakarta; there were blackouts in parts of Central Java, along with parts of both West Java and East Java.[2] Power resumed in most areas of Jakarta at about 5:00 pm (UTC+7) on the same day.
Cause
editPrior to the blackout, the Jakarta area was importing about 21% of its power needs.[3]
A transmission line between Cilegon and Saguling, both in West Java, failed at 10:23 am local time.[2] The devices protecting the system misoperated, sending incorrect signals to Suralaya Power Station.[3] This led to a cascading failure that shut down two units of the Paiton Power Station in East Java and six units at Suralaya in West Java.[2]
PT. PLN, the state-owned electricity company, confirmed that the electricity grid failed at several points throughout Java and the neighbouring island of Bali, causing a supply shortfall of 2,700 MW, roughly half of the original supply.[citation needed]
Post-blackout
editPLN apologised for the incident and said about 293,235 customers will be compensated. Meanwhile, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono ordered police and the national intelligence agency to assist PLN to trace the cause of the blackouts.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Donnan, Shawn (19 August 2005). "Indonesian outage leaves 100m without electricity". Financial Times. London. Retrieved 21 June 2009.
- ^ a b c "Massive blackout hits Java, Bali" Archived 1 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine. The Jakarta Post, 19 August 2005, 11:16 am; retrieved 19 February (Eastern Standard Time) or 20 (Indonesian time), 2009.
- ^ a b 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.