Here is a detailed timeline of the blackout:
- 2 p.m. FirstEnergy's Eastlake Unit 5, a 680-megawatt coal
generation plant in Eastlake, Ohio, trips off. A giant puff
of ash from the plant rains down on neighbors. On a hot
summer afternoon, "that wasn't a unique event in and of
itself," says Ralph DiNicola, spokesman for Akron, Ohio-
based FirstEnergy. "We had some transmission lines out of
service and the Eastlake system tripped out of service, but
we didn't have any outages related to those events."
- 3:06 p.m. FirstEnergy's Chamberlin-Harding power
transmission line, a 345-kilovolt power line in
northeastern Ohio, trips. The company hasn't reported a
cause, but the outage put extra strain on FirstEnergy's
Hanna-Juniper line, the next to go dark.
- 3:32 p.m. Extra power coursing through FirstEnergy's
Hanna-Juniper 345-kilovolt line heats the wires, causing
them to sag into a tree and trip.
- 3:41 p.m. An overload on First Energy's Star-South Canton
345-kilovolt line trips a breaker at the Star switching
station, where FirstEnergy's grid interconnects with a
neighboring grid owned by the American Electric Power Co.
AEP's Star station is also in northeastern Ohio.
- 3:46 p.m. AEP's 345-kilovolt Tidd-Canton Control
transmission line also trips where it interconnects with
FirstEnergy's grid, at AEP's connection station in Canton,
Ohio.
- 4:06 p.m. FirstEnergy's Sammis-Star 345-kilovolt line,
also in northeast Ohio, trips, then reconnects.
- 4:08 p.m. Utilities in Canada and the eastern United
States see wild power swings. "It was a hopscotch event,
not a big cascading domino effect," says Sean O'Leary,
chief executive of Genscape, a company that monitors
electric transmissions.
- 4:09 p.m. The already lowered voltage coursing to
customers of Cleveland Public Power, inside the city of
Cleveland, plummets to zero. "It was like taking a light
switch and turning it off," says Jim Majer, commissioner of
Cleveland Public Power. "It was like a heart attack. It
went straight down from 300 megawatts to zero."
- 4:10 p.m. The Campbell No. 3 coal-fired power plant near
Grand Haven, Mich., trips off.
- 4:10 p.m. A 345-kilovolt line known as Hampton-Thetford,
in Michigan, trips.
- 4:10 p.m. A 345-kilovolt line known as Oneida-Majestic,
also in Michigan, trips.
- 4:11 p.m. Orion Avon Lake Unit 9, a coal-fired power
plant in Avon Lake, Ohio, trips.
- 4:11 p.m. A transmission line running along the Lake Erie
shore to the Davis-Besse nuclear plant near Toledo, Ohio,
trips.
- 4:11 p.m. A transmission line in northwest Ohio
connecting Midway, Lemoyne and Foster substations trips.
- 4:11 p.m. The Perry Unit 1 nuclear reactor in Perry,
Ohio, shuts down automatically after losing power.
- 4:11 p.m. The FitzPatrick nuclear reactor in Oswego,
N.Y., shuts down automatically after losing power.
- 4:12 p.m. The Bruce Nuclear station in Ontario, Canada,
shuts down automatically after losing power.
- 4:12 p.m. Rochester Gas & Electric's Ginna nuclear plant
near Rochester, N.Y., shuts down automatically after losing
power.
- 4:12 p.m. Nine Mile Point nuclear reactor near Oswego,
N.Y., shuts down automatically after losing power.
- 4:15 p.m. FirstEnergy's Sammis-Star 345-kilovolt line, in
northeast Ohio, trips and reconnects a second time.
- 4:16 p.m. Oyster Creek nuclear plant in Forked River,
N.J., shuts down automatically because of power
fluctuations on the grid.
- 4:17 p.m. The Enrico Fermi Nuclear plant near Detroit
shuts down automatically after losing power.
- 4:17-4:21 p.m. Numerous power transmission lines in
Michigan trip.
- 4:25 p.m. Indian Point nuclear power plants 2 and 3 in
Buchanan, N.Y., shut down automatically after losing power.