Need to Fight Fire? There's a Map App for That!
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Need to Fight Fire? There's a Map App for That!

Redlands, CaliforniaOctober 6, 2014—Wildfires raged across Northern California and southern Oregon in August. But thanks to a new map application, two local utilities were able to monitor and protect more than 16,000 miles of transmission lines that serve nearly two million customers.

PacifiCorp GIS Solutions developed the app specifically to monitor wildfires for Pacific Power and Rocky Mountain Power. The intensity and direction of the early August wildfires clearly threatened three lines—one of which was de-energized and two of which lost power and sustained damages.

"Not a single customer lost power due to the fire," said Marshall Payne, GIS Support Services Director at PacfiCorp. "Mother Nature is difficult to predict, but thanks to a well-designed system and contingency planning, customers retained power even when damage was sustained."

PacifiCorp is responsible for more transmission lines in the West than any other single entity. Its app draws on real-time data fed to it by government agencies, including the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the US Forest Service. Every four hours, the app pushes an updated, data-driven map of new and existing wildfires to risk-management and operational staff at the utilities. When a situation like the August fires erupts, the staff can e-mail decision makers a clean PDF capturing the live threat to transmission lines.

Payne's team developed the app to better manage wildfire risk to utility infrastructure. Before this app, mapping wildfire threat was a manual task that burned response time.

"There was no way to easily visualize transmission infrastructure in proximity to wildfires," Payne said.

The app draws on ArcGIS technology to translate government data into live mapping. It has proved so efficient that the app has since been repurposed into two new versions to produce seismic-activity and flood alerts.

"It's three flavors of the same app," Payne said.

PacifiCorp has used ArcGIS, made by Esri, for a variety of similar tasks related to visualizing infrastructure data. The same concept underlies its ability to plan transmission corridors, select solar and wind farm sites, assess power outages, manage natural resources at power facilities, and manage real estate and environmental permitting.

Learn more about Esri technology for transmission utilities at  esri.com/transmission.

About Esri

Since 1969, Esri has been giving customers around the world the power to think and plan geographically. The market leader in GIS, Esri software is used in more than 350,000 organizations worldwide including each of the 200 largest cities in the United States, most national governments, more than two-thirds of Fortune 500 companies, and more than 7,000 colleges and universities. Esri applications, running on more than one million desktops and thousands of Web and enterprise servers, provide the backbone for the world's mapping and spatial analysis. Esri is the only vendor that provides complete technical solutions for desktop, mobile, server, and Internet platforms. Visit us at  www.esri.com.

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