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Power Outages in California Hurting Colleges, Threatening Research

Power Outages in California Hurting Colleges, Threatening Research

“The University of California, Berkeley, canceled classes Thursday, as power was out on the core campus.”

Nothing disrupts life like the loss of power. Everything comes to a standstill. Higher education is feeling the effects of it in California.

Inside Higher Ed reports:

Calif. Power Outage Closes Campuses, Threatens Research

Citing fears about severe weather and possible resulting wildfires, Pacific Gas & Electric this week cut the power for large swaths of Northern California. The outages have affected up to 2.5 million people and resulted in the closures of several colleges and universities, while also threatening research laboratories, some of which lack adequate backup power systems, according to news reports.

The University of California, Berkeley, canceled classes Thursday, as power was out on the core campus. The university told students, faculty and staff members to stay away from campus, noting that some buildings were running on emergency power systems.

“There is no PG&E power, and the campus’s emergency power could fail if it is overloaded,” the university said in a written statement. “While some buildings may appear to be functioning fully and normally, with lights on, for example, they actually are being partially energized through temporary battery backup, backup generators and, in some cases, power from Berkeley’s small co-generation power facility.”

Also closed Thursday due to the PG&E shutdown were Mills College, Santa Rosa Junior College, Humboldt State University and Sonoma State University.

Several researchers at Berkeley took to social media or spoke to the news media to describe how the outage and inadequate backup power was threatening research labs and projects.

“Many friends and colleagues barely have enough emergency power to keep freezers cold and incubators running,” Julia Torvi, a graduate student and researcher at Berkeley, told The New York Times. “These two things hold millions of dollars of research, tens of years of effort, their contents being irreplaceable.”

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