Raccoon-Caused Outages on the Rise at Substations Nationwide


Four Factors Behind The Outbreak – And How To Stop It



New Freedom, Pennsylvania – Substations across the U.S. are under attack from an unexpected culprit:  the raccoon. Recent raccoon-related outages have plagued both urban and rural substations, cutting power to thousands of residences and businesses. In fact, dozens of substation outages every year can be attributed to raccoons climbing onto equipment. Consumers Energy reports that 21% of its wildlife-related outages are caused by raccoons.



TransGard Systems studied raccoon behavior when it developed its substation fencing, which is specially designed to protect against incursion from climbing animals. Bill Reichard, TransGard's general manager, said the current spike in raccoon-related outages should come as no surprise to those who have studied the species. He attributes the current outbreak to four interrelated factors:



•Â Seasonal activity      Raccoons enter mating season as daylight increases. During mating, males seeking females roam their entire habitat area, which can be as large as 20 square miles. The increase in activity creates a greater likelihood a raccoon will come across a substation and attempt to use it for warmth, security or sleep.

•Â Instinctive behavior     Raccoons rely on trees or other vertical structures to climb when they feel threatened. Substation equipment, poles and chain-link fencing appeal to raccoons, which instinctively seek height for protection.

•Â Intelligence     Studies indicate raccoons are an intelligent species, capable of remembering solutions to problems for years. They can bypass or outsmart many of the less-effective substation protections, like plastic fence panels.

•Â Population explosion     After a population explosion starting in the 1940s, the estimated number of raccoons in North America in the late 1980s had grown 15 to 20 times higher than in the 1930s. The rising raccoon population has led to a greater number of expensive substation outages.



Many of the substations with recent outages had installed preventive equipment that failed to repel raccoon invaders.  TransGard Systems took raccoon behavior into account during the design of its fencing. Today, TransGard fencing is the only product that delivers a humane electric shock that turns away climbing animals. Because raccoons are intelligent, they remember and avoid substations protected by TransGard.



"Typically, prevention of just a single animal-caused outage will justify the cost of installing a TransGard System," Reichard said. "It's why most of our customers install fences at multiple, or even dozens of, locations."



Reichard said that, while not all substations require a proven raccoon deterrent, substations near habitats that appeal to climbing animals should consider TransGard fencing. Today, TransGard protects 2,500 substations nationwide. For more on how TransGard prevents costly outages, visit www.transgardfence.com.



About TransGard Systems    

TransGard's patented fencing was developed exclusively to eliminate substation outages caused by climbing animals. Since it was founded in 1990, TransGard fences have been installed at 2,500 substations in the U.S. and Canada, and as far away as South America. For more information or to request a quote, visit www.transgardfence.com.




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