FCC Requires Backup Power For 210K Cell Towers 248
1sockchuck alerts us to an article in Data Center Knowledge that explores ramifications from the FCC's decision a couple of months back to require backup power for cell sites and other parts of the telecom infrastructure. The new rule was prompted by wireless outages during Hurricane Katrina. There are more than 210,000 cell towers in the US, as well as 20,000 telecom central offices that will also need generators or batteries. Municipalities are bracing for disputes as carriers try to add generators or batteries to cell sites on rooftops or water towers. The rules will further boost demand in the market for generators, where there are already lengthy delivery backlogs for some models.
You mean they didn't before? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yikes!
That's alright, I know a guy (Score:5, Funny)
Re:You mean they didn't before? (Score:5, Insightful)
At the same time, when cellphones are usable, they can be very helpful. If many of the cell towers didn't fail during Katrina, it would have been much easier to help many of the victims and coordinate the rescue in a more efficient manner.
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Here in Jamaica one celphone company spnt a year advertising it's performance during huricane Ivan. What's worse is that the other major competitor had everything. Batterys, Generators etc... The mistake thy made was in the size fuel tanks at each site. They figured a couple days suply would be enogh.
With the number of Cellsites they have , this ment a small army roaming the country with botles of gasoline to keap the network at least partialy running.
And here are you y
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Who cares if the cell site has power or not if one of the "huts" on the backhaul to the network has run out of juice.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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IANAS (scientist), but i believe it is microbial growth in the fuel that ruins it.
In Argentina ... (Score:2)
Needing a law to require something so obvious as a backup power source is sad, but true
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We had a mild quake here in the Bay Area a few weeks ago and AT&T's cell sites all went into some weird lockdown mode. You could call other AT&T customers, but couldn't call anything offsite. I asked someone who is familiar with the cell infrastructure, and he said that some cell sites actually do that intentionally in a disaster situation to increase bandwidth for emergency calls. Not sure if that's what happened or if they just lost power to some critical call routing facility, though.
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I don't know if they have backup power though... I've never noticed either my mobile or the land line phone to be down during a power cut, but then there aren't many.
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At last (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:At last (Score:5, Funny)
Usually they just say ok and hang up, without even noticing...
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And I wonder
Re:At last (Score:5, Insightful)
This used to happen all the time at my mums place. The outage would affect her and the weekend house across the road (who would most likely be away). The neighbor up the hill would be a good indicator to it being a possum induced fuse failure or something more widespread.
Ditto for a failure in your fusebox. If everyone else has power and you don't, there isn't much use calling the power company... I know most people reading this would have a tripped breaker fixed in a few seconds, but maybe your grandmother wouldn't know how to, and in fact she might still have fuse wire instead of a resettable breaker.
Even for the mail server case, a user in a remote branch who hasn't received any email all morning would probably ask if the server was down before bothering you with their specific issue. Of course a good helpdesk would put up a recorded message in that case eg 'We are currently experiencing problems with our email server, we expect the problem to be fixed in xxx minutes'.
Still have a problem (Score:3, Insightful)
24 hours is not enough (Score:4, Informative)
24 hours is sufficent to cover for brief, minor outages. It is not enough to cover for anything close to a natural disaster where many sites lose power and there are not enough resources to fix them all in 24 hours.
Here in New Zealand, all our telecom has 24 hour battery backup but it is sized "just right". Last year we lost power for approx 40 hours due to a severe snow storm. The phones lasted for appeox 25 hours.
Re:Still have a problem (Score:4, Informative)
Not so. That all depends on where the damage is. If it's at, or fairly near the tower, quite possibly. If the power's out because a power line was dropped by the temblor, there's a good chance that the cell tower and any generator are just fine. I remember after the Northridge Quake there were major power outages, but the equipment worked just fine as soon as the power was back. As far as floods go, there's no reason not to install them in waterproof rooms to make sure they're OK even if that room's under water.
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Exhaust and intake?
can't exactly run them up the same tower can you? Engines don't work so well sucking on their own exhaust fumes, whiteness my merc diesel and the brain-dead California EPA putting an EGR valve on it.
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Simply a matter of proper design so that they're far enough apart that the intake isn't sucking in the exhaust. Of course, there's always the possibility that the flood water will be deep enough to submerge them, but as long as they're above the surface the generators could keep working. (Yes, refueling them might also be a problem. Nothing's perfect.)
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Plus, cell towers are usually built on hillsides (where available) for signal propagation reasons, so they tend to be A. above the water line in all but the most extreme floods, and B. built on bedrock, and thus less susceptible to quake damage.
Your biggest problems are likely to be lack of working generators, lack of enough fuel to keep them running, failure of batteries to function correctly due to improper testing, and in some climates, failure of generators to start due to low temperatures (causing bo
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New Orleans should be used as a land fill, till it is sufficiently raised to be viable again.
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Consider... Backup power good for just 72 hours, (batteries, etc) and connections by directional microwave. (common) Most disasters are short-lived events. It only takes one cell tower to provi
Re:Still have a problem (Score:5, Funny)
You must be new here.
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Presumably the tower would be located on high land or on top of buildings, putting it and the generators at lower risk of rising floodwaters. And during earthquakes, large amounts of buildings don't usually collapse. A few older buildings and structures collapse and large numbers of buildings receive light to moderate damage. Power failures are caused mostly by ruptured transmission lines, not by knocking out the actual power source.
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Not anymore. After an earthquake the down power lines cause fires and secondary hazzards. As a safety upgrade many power plants are designed to shutdown in an earthquake, not to protect the generation plant, but to protect the city.
"When the earthquake struck, Intermountain's two 800-million-watt stations at the Delta plant automatically shut down, cutting off 50 percent of the power for the cities
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Or California, where should an earthquake knock out the original power to a tower, it is just as likely to knock out the generator.
No earthquake ever had as much effect to the power grid as that forest fire several states away did in the mid 1990s which knocked out the power grid to most of the Western United States. The Big Bear/Landers quake lit off those cannister thingies on power poles around me like fireworks, but power was restored faster than in that later fire.
Oh and *my* servers stayed up because we had generators when the fire took out Silicon Valley and everyone else. My first +1 year Linux server uptime was split before
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-nB
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Hell during the North Ridge quake we didn't lose power but instead watched the news people in the morning start looking around as the studio shook and than you heard the earthquake approaching which sounded like a 100 freight trains coming at you, pretty hilarious and later on that day we went to Knott's Berry Farm where all the rides were still working.
I was in a 7-11 buying gasoline when that thing struck and it felt like a big giant had taken hold of the building and was slamming it up and down. But you're right, power was only out for a little bit if at all and I was something like a mile or two from Knott's Berry Farm.
Solar (Score:5, Interesting)
Even if it's not perfectly reliable, such a tower could be connected to the grid, and in the event of emergency, it'll be at the very least, intermittent,which is enough for some traffic to flow out for a very long time. With a battery/generator, you'd only have power, while reliable, for a limited amount of time.
Re:Solar and Wind Turbine (Score:5, Informative)
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Though as the article mentions, it's not like they are going to allow a big generator and battery, either...
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2) There is a fairly constant wind all along the coastlines.
3) Solar panels can be used over virtually the entire outer surface of a tower.
4) Alternatives to batteries are coming up fast [slashdot.org].
Although I agree that wind and solar would ultimately be impractical.
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This was a reason I still have a landline.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Ma Bell and the landline service has been built out for generations and it shows.
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Ma Bell and the landline service has been built out for generations and it shows.
Ma Bell works when no one else does because it's a requirement by law. Cellular networks are not deemed monopolies like Ma Bell, and therefore are unencumbered by the reliability expectations incumbent local exchange carriers are required to provide.
I don't believe cellular providers should have the cost burden thrust upon them because people demand to be able to use their phones after huge disasters occur. If you want that level of service, be prepared for the cost of cellular service to rise, as the
A problem that won't exist (Score:2)
I find it hard to believe that this is going to be an issue. The batteries don't have to be up on the roof, or on top of the water tower to be effective. Yes, the closer the better, but I doubt there will be more than a handful of places where there's no other place for them.
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Honestly I half expected a few Slashpeople to rail against the FCC for requiring backup power, but I'm glad I haven't seen any such posts.
Having lived my entire life on the ring of fire on either side of the ocean, I consider such a law to be in the same vein as one requiring people to breathe a certain number of times per minute. What kind of idiots does the FCC think Americans are?
It's common sense, required and shouldn't need to be a law. How stupid do they want the American IT industry to look to the world?
What next? Do we need a law requiring American IT professionals to not stick their fingers into light sockets while in the bathtub
All CDMA are backed up already (Score:2)
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GSM systems are often mixed between two frequencies. It would not be at all surprising if they only backed up primary towers (850/900) and don't back up extra towers (1800/1900) that just provide fill coverage for weak areas, as these are more likely to be in places where a hefty backup system would be impractical (on church bell towers, corporate rooftops, etc.). The main towers should be backed up though. If that isn't the case in your area, that's just sad.
Disaster response? (Score:5, Insightful)
I worry about the trend to move to cell phones. We rely on both our cell phone's battery and the cell tower to stay powered. We also rely on available frequencies to use the tower. In Katrina and recently the San Diego fires, everyone immediately got on their cell phones and jammed all of the towers. Is there enough redundancy, power, and capacity to handle the next disaster? I don't think we should wait for the next hurricane to prove if cell towers can handle an emergency.
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When I worked for ARCO Oil and Gas in the 1980's, they counted on the power being out. So they spent 13 million 1980 dollars to run a duplicate high power line from another grid to back up their data center. So their data center was served by two separate power grids. Also A
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POTS? It's like the Internet. Yeah, your line might get cut, but then you run next door and use your neighbor's.
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Seems like something promoted by the generator manufacturers' association. 210,000? I guess that's why they're the FCC and I'm not. Big thinking.
So, they'll sit in their boxes at each cell company's disaster-fortified warehouse until needed? Or it will provide jobs for people to change the oil and gas and test (and guard?) them periodically on or off site? I'm assuming the former. So it's sort of like the big Pharma handouts we give them to stock warehouses of drugs t
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significantly less backup f
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73, de w7com
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Here in Europe the adoption of cell phones has by now caused POTS to be being reduced in some areas. People are cancelling their POTS subscriptions because every family member has a cell phone.
People don't realize how vulnerable the cell phone network is. Towers here have very small UPS's, usually enough for a few minute outages, and the connectors for external generators are there just for the image. Nobody seriesly thinks that we could hook up gene
I am in a Outage RIGHT NOW with NO Cell Service! (Score:5, Interesting)
Those Damn Ice Storms here in the Central US (today and yesterday). (Generators/UPS are so so nice!)
Had Cell Service (with AT&T/Cingular) for about 3 hours following the outage (currently the largest single outage in my state's history)... but apparently the cell-site UPS batteries drained and the tower site did not have a generator...
I am going to ask for a prorated refund for my service plan (and they will legally HAVE TO give me that discount for my contracted service being out).
If EVERYONE called up their service providers and asked specifically for their prorated discount for service being out (on that given day)... I bet they would invest in UPS/Generator combos at the cell tower sites... -Z
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Speaking of which, I have been looking around but I still don't see that Aussie-accented-guy standing in any ponds or holes around here touting the new 'AT&T Wireless Broadband Network'...
Sure, what else to do after an Ice storm (after getting your power working).. but Post on
I have remarkably reliable Cable
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Cripes. Does this really need to even be asked? He could simply be at a friend's house or at the library or something. Maybe he took his laptop to Starbucks and logged on there. Maybe he has a generator.
Use your brain, yeesh.
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Many people have a generator that they never consider using. It's called a car. Unlike a standby generator, it is most likely have been recently serviced, has a working battery, fresh fuel and oil, and tested in the last week. Dig out your pocket inverter, and extension cord and laptop. Fire up the car once in a while to recharge the battery.
I wanted more power than a lighter socket inverter will provide so I installed a trunk mount inverter.
I have a Prius. It takes care of shu
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Pretty convenient, it'd be nice to have it here, where when some asshole hits one of the curbside transformers and the power goes out for 6 hours we don't have internet!
Re:I am in a Outage RIGHT NOW with NO Cell Service (Score:2)
Oh, some cell sites had generators, but the cell co.'s had assumed they could just grab a gas can at
Thief Opportunity (Score:4, Interesting)
NEW CASH COW? Its bad enough in Dallas where miles lights were out along the divided highways in the Summer of 2006 because thieves pulled out the connecting. This was bad in the summer of 2006 and its better now since openings have been welded shut. I can see generators being the new cash cow for thieves.
Thanks
Jim
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ambient power (Score:2, Interesting)
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Australian Cyclone Experience (Score:2)
There was major problems with the telephone systems. The landline systems had 24 hour battery backups, but beyond that, they had to rely on workers delivering gen
Lots o' problems (Score:2)
There are already plenty of hand-wringers who try to block any cell site due to "harmful radiation". Now that same group is going to be heading to city hall to complain about noisy/polluting/etc. generators and stacks of batteries full of lead an
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I've dealt with this.... (Score:2)
We're putting too many eggs in one basket. That's one of the reasons why I'm an amateur radio operator [emergency-radio.org] (ham). If I had my license during the aforementioned problem, I could have easily gotten the other engineer on the airwaves
Whine, Whine, Whine... (Score:2, Interesting)
Aww,,, Sniff, sniff. I co-manage 5 remote 2-way radio sites and, due to increased power needs, we have to upgrade the backup generator at one of our sites. Our primary electrical contractor quoted $38,000 for a COMPLETE installation: 35KW generator, transfer switch and installation.
And that's for ONE generator. The cellular folks will be buying them by the trainload and should be able to weasel a signific
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"This is going to be really, really hard and expensive, but we're going to be doing all this clever stuff to make sure it costs MUCH less than it really should. That's why your service fees are only going up by 30%."
If they worked together (Score:2)
Where's that invisible hand of the free market that is supposed to magically make our disjointed, antiquated mobile system more efficient than the rest of the world's?
Mod me down for being a commie bastard.
Europe already has it (Score:2)
This is why all that -48VDC thing in telco.
Katrina (Score:5, Informative)
Regarding hurricane Katrina:
I work for a large cell carrier. We had backup power to every single cell in the area. In fact, after the hurricane we were doing pretty well, though some of the towers were taken out by debris. Only a couple were actually submerged. We lost a few trunk lines, but for the most part the system was working.
The problem was we didn't have any way to get gas to the generators. The roads were impassible, and based on news reports we were reluctant to send crews in to the sites we could reach for security reasons. So after a couple days the cell sites started going offline one at a time as the generators ran out of power.
As far as I know every one of our sites, in the entire country, already has a couple days worth of backup power.
There is only one real solution for this. (Score:3, Interesting)
Specific Power EMB (5-10 kW/kg) Lead Acid (0.1-0.5 kW/kg)
Energy Recovery EMB (90%-95%) Lead Acid (60%-70%)
Specific Energy EMB (100 Wh/kg) Lead Acid (30-35 Wh/kg)
Service Lifetime EMB (>10 years) Lead Acid (3-5 years)
Self Discharge Time EMB (Weeks to months) Lead Acid (variable)
Hazardous Chemicals EMB (none) Lead Acid (Lead, Sulfur, & Acid)
"A new look at an Old Idea the Electromechanical Battery" Science and Technology Review April 1996 by
Dangerous EMB (possibly in massive physical impact) Lead Acid (High fire danger)
Caterpillar and Beacon power already sell off the shelf UPS based on EMB for anything up to a whole grid substation. These are the answer to balancing the output of solar and wind power as well, far better than ice batteries or lead acid. These are the answer to solving our reliability problems with the national power grid (if each substation could self power for even a few 1/10s of a second you can reroute the grid. In fact these are even a possible answer to batteries for cars thanks to new fiber based flywheels instead of steel. There is literally no sound reason to use Lead acid to backup a data center, a telephone switch, or a cell tower anymore.
The FCC should demand that the power backup meets a certain level of reliability and power density within a top percentile of the most cost effective solution so that people don't use old outdated technology just because it is a system that they are accustomed to.
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That's not strictly true. Power is often trunked in from considerable distance away. If the natural disaster effects the generation area and not the cell tower then the cell tower can be out even though it still has connectivity to the world.
Further, a lot of cell towers use microwave links to the nearby towers and even back to the phone company base; particularly towers in r
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Just because power is out in one town does not mean it would be off in another where that office is located. Even if the power was off where the central office is the equipment there is power backed up. Afterall it's providing service for a large area.
If power goes out in one town and takes out the towers for that town it's annoying, But nothing like having
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They arn't going to be looted. Then a thief would have to know how to hookup a permanent installation generator. (It could be a 3 phase generator which requires a equal load. On all the phases)
Plus something worth that much would have it's own serial # So if they tried to sell it. They run the risk of getting caught.
But then I have heard stories of people trying to steal copper from live mains. Getting killed in the process.
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I like it. Cell towers should simply be configured to use 440 volt 3 phase power. I can see someone with a stolen generator connecting one phase to ground thinking it's nutral and connecting their loads up to the other 2 phases.. Can you say instant smoke?
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If every person in the US turned on everything electric in their house, the grid would be brought to it's knees.
If every person in the US tried to fill up their car at once, the fuel industry would be brought to it's knees.
If every person in the US tried to fly at once, the airline industry would be brought to it's knees.
If every person in the US hit slashdot at once, slashdot would be brought to it's knees.
You can't build infrastructure to handle everyone at once, all the time. It just doesn
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Re:power isn't the only problem (Score:4, Informative)
http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:cwTrqX9BMl8J:www.cse.umkc.edu/~beardc/WorkSummary.pdf+GSM+emergency+priority+traffic&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=9&gl=us&client=firefox-a [64.233.167.104]
Wireless Priority Services
- Became a high priority after September 11, 2001.
Extension of the U.S. wireline GETS system that had been around for many years.
Used the same call queuing approach.
Only available from GSM providers
- Only GSM has priority call identifiers.
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I would think that local breakers would trip, cutting off branches that are drawing excessive power. The grid would be fine, but there would be a lot of unhappy customers.
The fuel industry would be celebrating. That just means that they can raise the price of gas to $79 a gallon. This in
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If every person in the US tried to fly at once, the airline industry would be brought to it's knees.
There's a fixed capacity and since you cannot get inside an airport without a ticket any more, I don't think that would be much of a problem. I think the days of routine overbooking ended six years ago. The terminals might get a tad full if every flight was fully booked, but whatever there's enough space at each gate for a fully booked flight.
You people who don't have your plane tickets already are out of luck, but the airlines won't melt down. People who find thin Sn headgear fashionable should take no
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Also because cell phones use radio frequencies, also regulated by the FCC.
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Is it fair for the FCC to impose such a backup power requirement so long after licenses were granted? Maybe, maybe not. The cellular operators should have done some initial analysis to address license obligations for emergency services. I