North Carolina’s Electric Cooperatives Stand Ready For Hurricane Earl

September 1, 2010

Raleigh, N.C. —North Carolina’s electric cooperatives are prepared to respond quickly to power outages that occur as a result of Hurricane Earl, which is forecasted to brush North Carolina’s barrier islands late Thursday night or early Friday morning. Six of North Carolina’s electric cooperatives serve coastal counties, providing electricity to a total of approximately 554,000 households in that area.

Electric cooperatives are located in the communities they serve, and crews prepare for storms of this magnitude by testing equipment and checking supplies locally to ensure power restoration can begin immediately.  At the Tarheel Electric Membership Association (TEMA) in Raleigh, a purchasing and supply co-op owned by the state’s 26 electric cooperatives, employees are lining up additional crews from Georgia, Tennessee, Mississippi and the western part of North Carolina and taking the necessary steps to coordinate restoration efforts.

The state’s cooperatives are committed to providing safe and reliable power, but outages caused by high winds and flooding are unpredictable.  The cooperatives encourage the public to remember the following:

North Carolina’s electric cooperatives serve 2.5 million people in 93 of the state’s 100 counties, primarily in rural parts of the state.