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Florida鈥檚 utility companies are preparing for stronger hurricane seasons

A home which came off its blocks sits partially submerged in a canal in Horseshoe Beach, Fla., Friday, Sept. 1, 2023, two days after the passage of Hurricane Idalia. Nearly all the experts think 2024 will be one of the busiest Atlantic hurricane seasons on record.
Rebecca Blackwell
/
AP
A home which came off its blocks sits partially submerged in a canal in Horseshoe Beach, Fla., Friday, Sept. 1, 2023, two days after the passage of Hurricane Idalia. Nearly all the experts think 2024 will be one of the busiest Atlantic hurricane seasons on record.

Hurricane season starts next week, and the official forecast is a doozy.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration , up to 13 of them hurricanes, and possibly 7 of those could be at least category 3 status.

Florida鈥檚 utility leaders say they are responding to a trend of stronger and more unpredictable hurricanes, and all of that preparation comes at a cost.

State regulators heard their presentations this week ahead of hurricane season.

鈥淲e no longer feel comfortable that a category 1 is going to stay a category 1," said Armando Pimentel, president and CEO of Florida Power & Light (FPL), which provides electricity for 5.8 million accounts across half of the state.

READ MORE: NOAA issues its busiest hurricane season forecast yet, warns: 'The big ones are fast'

鈥淭he storms certainly appear to be bigger and stronger now than they have been in the past," he said. "We and others have been surprised by the increase of intensity of those storms in a very, very short period of time.鈥

Take Idalia, for example. It zoomed through warm Gulf waters last August, going ashore in Keaton Beach in the Big Bend. It quickly escalated into a category 4 storm before dropping to a 3 at landfall.

Pimentel says it鈥檚 not the first time a storm has intensified so unexpectedly, and he notes the waters are warm again this year.

鈥淯nderstanding that it鈥檚 important for your customers to have power on as quickly as possibly after a storm, we and others are going to be a little bit more conservative than we鈥檝e been in the past," he said, "because now we can鈥檛 miss a category 1 storm turning into a category 4 or 5 storm and not being well-prepared.鈥

Utility leaders told the Florida Public Service Commission it鈥檚 becoming more of a challenge to line up assistance from neighboring states when a rapidly intensifying storm could hit their area. As a result, nearby states that usually send help are holding on to their manpower and resources longer.

鈥淏ecause of the unpredictability of these hurricanes, you鈥檙e planning for a circumstance that鈥檚 worse than is being forecasted, and you鈥檙e also receiving resources that are coming from much farther away than they probably were coming from historically,鈥 said Tampa Electric Company president and CEO Archie Collins. He said crews came from as far away as Illinois, Virginia, and Arkansas to help after Idalia.

鈥淚t is becoming an increasingly difficult game to figure out how to find that balance between being well-prepared and not overspending on planning for an impending hurricane," Collins said.

The News Service of Florida reports the state鈥檚 four private electric utilities 鈥 FPL, Tampa Electric, Duke Energy Florida, and Florida Public Utilities - can pass along the cost of hurricane preparation and recovery to customers.

鈥淪torm preparedness is right up there with our commitment to safety, reliability, resiliency, prudent spending. And that is what allows us to basically stage an army, and that鈥檚 what all of us have to do,鈥 said Duke Florida President Melissa Seixas. Taking care of visiting crews is a significant expense.

鈥淲e are literally staging an army. We鈥檝e got to house them, we鈥檝e got to feed them, we鈥檝e got to get their clothes washed, and of course, we need to help keep them safe,鈥 Seixas said. Taking care of those visiting crews is a significant expense for utilities.

鈥淭he point you鈥檙e really hitting home is the increased intensification of storms and that to be prepared for that is going to necessarily be more costly," said Florida Public Service Commissioner Gabriella Passidomo. She said utilities will have to balance the needs of customers with trying to navigate storms that are becoming more unpredictable.
Copyright 2024 WFSU

Gina Jordan
Gina Jordanis the host of Morning Edition for WFSU News. Gina is a Tallahassee native and graduate of Florida State University. She spent 15 years working in news/talk and country radio in Orlando before becoming a reporter and All Things Considered host for WFSU in 2008. She left after a few years to spend more time with her son, working part-time as the capital reporter/producer for 港澳天下彩Public Media in Miami and as a drama teacher at Young Actors Theatre. She also blogged and reported for StateImpact Florida, an NPR education project, and produced podcasts and articles for AVISIAN Publishing. Gina has won awards for features, breaking news coverage, and newscasts from contests including the Associated Press, Green Eyeshade, and Murrow Awards. Gina is on the Florida Associated Press Broadcasters Board of Directors. Gina is thrilled to be back at WFSU! In her free time, she likes to read, travel, and watch her son play football. Follow Gina Jordan on Twitter: @hearyourthought
The News Service of Florida
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