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Massive California Power Outage Triggers Chaos in Science Labs

Researchers without access to backup power scramble to save invaluable specimens and expensive reagents

Power outages were scheduled as preemptive moves by PG&E to address hot, dry and windy weather and the risk of wildfires, according to the company.

California’s largest utility company shut off power to more than a million people across the northern part of the state on 9 and 10 October. The outage sent scientists at the University of California, Berkeley, scrambling to save specimens and experiments.

The Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), based in San Francisco, California, planned the outages to reduce the risk of wildfires. The utility cited forecasts of warm, strong winds of the sort that have fanned devastating blazes across the region in recent years. PG&E has acknowledged that its equipment likely sparked the catastrophic Camp Fire, California’s deadliest known wildfire, which killed 86 people in 2018. The company has said that the power outage could last several days, frustrating residents — including some researchers.

“Our federal grants require campus to have facilities to support our work when the damn power goes out. It’s ridiculous,” tweeted Noah Whiteman, an evolutionary biologist at UC Berkeley. The university cancelled classes on 9 and 10 October in light of the power outage, and told faculty members not to come to campus.


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The neighbouring Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) closed its main site on 10 October. It will remain shuttered until further notice, according to a notice on the LBNL website. Officials estimate the earliest they could reopen the lab is 14 October.

Keeping their cool

Many labs at UC Berkeley lack reliable back-up power. Some researchers are taking drastic measures to preserve samples and supplies that require refrigeration. James Olzmann, a metabolic researcher at Berkeley, loaded his lab’s freezers onto trucks on 9 October and moved them to facilities at the nearby University of California, San Francisco, which still has power.

Jessica Lyons, a molecular biologist at UC Berkeley, says that each lab in her building has a single outlet that is connected to an emergency power system. The main freezer in Lyons’ lab, which keeps specimens at -80 °C, is plugged into that outlet. Lyons and her colleagues stocked the other freezers in their lab with dry ice on 8 October after being warned of the impending outages, to keep things cool.

“For any scientist, the bottom line is are all of the freezers getting power right now, or are they not,” she says. “I actually don’t know the answer to that right now, and they keep telling us not to come in.”

Sara Molinari, a synthetic biologist and visiting scientist at LBNL, says the power outage upended her very first experiment there. She had spent two days cultivating bacteria for a project to create synthetic materials with living organisms when the lab shut down. “I basically lost the entire week,” says Molinari, who is based at Rice University in Houston, Texas.

It’s unclear when the power outage in northern California will end, although PG&E had restored electricity to at least 100,000 customers by 10 October. The utility warned that it could take two days or more for its crews to examine power lines for damage before it could turn on the power to all of its customers.

The preventive outages follow a traumatic 2018 fire season. PG&E filed for bankruptcy protection in January in light of billions of dollars in insurance claims from people affected by the Camp Fire.

This article is reproduced with permission and was first published on October 10, 2019.