Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Harvest Public Media is a reporting collaboration focused on issues of food, fuel and field. Based at KCUR in Kansas City, Harvest covers these agriculture-related topics through an expanding network of reporters and partner stations throughout the Midwest.Most Harvest Public Media stories begin with radio- regular reports are aired on member stations in the Midwest. But Harvest also explores issues through online analyses, television documentaries and features, podcasts, photography, video, blogs and social networking. They are committed to the highest journalistic standards. Click here to read their ethics standards.Harvest Public Media was launched in 2010 with the support of a grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Today, the collaboration is supported by CPB, the partner stations, and contributions from underwriters and individuals.Tri States Public Radio is an associate partner of Harvest Public Media. You can play an important role in helping Harvest Public Media and Tri States Public Radio improve our coverage of food, field and fuel issues by joining the Harvest Network.

Efforts To Shore Up The Electrical Grid Could Mean Moving Power Lines Underground

File photo
Seth Bodine / Harvest Public Media
File photo

More power lines could move underground as part of an effort included in the infrastructure bill to update the nation’s energy system, but rural energy providers still worry about the cost of installation and maintenance.

The $1 trillion infrastructure bill, which passed the Senate in August, includes $73 billion to modernize the electric grid. U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm says moving power lines underground, a practice called “undergrounding,” may be part of that effort.

She says this would protect consumers from blackouts caused by severe weather. Countries like Germany and the Netherlands are already moving their power lines underground, and Granholm says that’s something the U.S. should invest in too.

“In other countries, there's a lot of effort of undergrounding distribution and transmission wires, where you can put soil over the top and just farm on top of it and have the farmer compensated for this line that goes underneath the ground that you can't even see,” Granholm says. “So there's things like that I think we've got to be moving in on on the transmission side.” Moving wires completely underground wouldn’t be easy. Burying power lines generally costs $1 million per mile and even more depending on geography and population, according to an analysis by Theodore Kury, the director of energy studies at the University of Florida. 

For member-owned rural electric cooperatives, the price of installation and maintenance may be too much. 

Chris Meyers, the general manager of the Oklahoma Association of Rural Electric Cooperatives, says moving electric lines underground is actually more expensive than burying fiber for the internet. 

“Electricity seeks ground. And so when you bury electricity, just the tiniest pinhole in that insulating sheath, and you have a problem,” Meyers says. “That's why overhead (powerlines) is (sic) so much cheaper. Burying fiber is a smaller cable, it can be trenched in very quickly and not as deep and with fewer problems because it does not carry a high voltage.” 

But Meyers says the infrastructure bill could help in other ways, like transmission.

“There's a lot of money for electrification of transportation,” Meyers says. “And if we go down that path, and I believe we will, it's just a matter of how fast it's going to require a large investment in our electric grid to be able to serve that tremendous amount of load.”

Copyright 2021 Harvest Public Media

Seth Bodine joined KOSU in June 2020, focusing on agriculture and rural issues.