Advertisement
Advertisement
Taiwan
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Traffic lights in Taipei affected by Monday’s power cut. Photo: CNA

Taiwan’s lights gradually come back on after power plant malfunction

  • Tsai Ing-wen cancels live stream of meeting with Mike Pompeo, demands investigation after parts of Taipei hit by blackout
  • Exact cause of power failure is still unknown but it occurred at the same plant blamed for last year’s rolling blackouts
Taiwan

Hydro and other power plants are being brought online to provide electricity to the southern part of Taiwan after a blackout on Thursday caused by a malfunction at the same power generation plant blamed for last year’s cuts.

Operator Taipower said electricity was in the process of being restored after a problem occurred at the Hsinta power plant which caused an ultra-high voltage substation to trip, leading to the power failure.

bTaiwan restores power after blackout hits 4 million homes

Parts of northern Taiwan, including Taipei, also lost power. The presidential office said Taiwanese leader Tsai Ing-wen had ordered the government to investigate and restore power as soon as possible.

The office said a live stream of Tsai’s meeting with the visiting former US secretary of state Mike Pompeo had been cancelled.

Tsai vowed to scrutinise electricity management after two major power outages last year, caused by problems at the same plant – a major coal-powered station in the southern city of Kaohsiung which provides around one-seventh of Taiwan’s energy.

Taiwan’s transport ministry said three trains on the high-speed rail line connecting northern and southern Taiwan were affected but normal service had resumed.

The economy minister Wang Mei-hua told reporters backup power supply was at 24 per cent when the incident happened. She said the blackout was not triggered by insufficient electricity supply, the root cause of May’s major power outages which coincided with a serious drought.

Wang said the cause of the latest problem at the Hsinta plant was not immediately clear, but power should start being restored in southern Taiwan from midday.

“I am very sorry for this major loss of electricity, and am extremely apologetic to the inconvenience caused, especially for the south,” she said.

Asked whether the plant had been hacked, cabinet spokesman Lo Ping-cheng said authorities could not rule out any cause.

“It all needs further proof and investigation, which requires evidence.”

The power failure throws students at the National Taiwan University of the Arts into darkness. Photo: Facebook

The Hsinchu science park, home to many large semiconductor companies such as TSMC, said it was not experiencing power outages, and the Taipei city government said the mass transit system was operating normally.

The southern Tainan Science Park, where TSMC also has plants, said it experienced a sudden drop of voltage in the morning, but there was no impact on production.

TSMC said a number of its labs had experienced “power dips” which lasted from about 400 milliseconds to more than one second. “The company is now checking if there is any actual impact,” it added.


5