According to AP the number of people without power today:
*New Jersey: 2.5 million.
*New York: 2.3 million.
*Pennsylvania: 1.2 million.
*Connecticut: 615,000.
*Maryland: 290,000.
*Massachusetts: 290,000.
*West Virginia: 271,000.
*Ohio: 250,000.
*New Hampshire: 210,000.
*Virginia: 180,000.
*Rhode Island: 110,000.
*Maine: 86,000.
*Michigan: 79,000.
*Delaware: 45,000.
*Washington, D.C.: 25,000.
*Vermont: 10,000.
Superstorm Sandy cuts power to 8.1 million homes
More
than 8.1 million U.S. homes and businesses were without power on
Tuesday after Hurricane Sandy tore down power lines, flooded
electrical networks and sparked an explosion at a Consolidated Edison
substation on Manhattan's East River.
30
October, 2012
About
a quarter of New York City's homes and businesses were without power
15 hours after Hurricane Sandy roared ashore accompanied by a nearly
14-foot (4.2-metre) tidal surge that flooded empty subway and highway
tunnels.
Con
Edison warned parts of New York City would be without power for a
more than a week. Mayor Michael Bloomberg told a news conference the
subway would be unlikely to resume service for four-to-five days.
Power
providers reported outages in every state from North Carolina to the
Canadian border and as far inland as Ohio and Indiana. New Jersey was
hardest hit state with 62 percent of customers suffering blackouts.
Seven states had a fifth or more of all customers without power.
At
11:00 a.m. EDT (1500 GMT), total U.S. outages were above 8.1 million
according to the Department of Energy, and were approaching the 8.4
million peak seen during Hurricane Irene last year.
The
figures cover homes and businesses, meaning the total number of
people affected will be far higher.
"This
is the largest storm-related outage in our history," said John
Miksad, Con Edison's senior vice president for electric operations.
An
explosion at a substation on Manhattan's East River on Monday night
contributed to the power cuts, and could complicate efforts to
restore electric supplies. Large sections of the island below 39th
Street - just south of Times Square - are without power.
Con
Edison told customers via Twitter that the hardest hit areas may face
more than a week without power. A total of 787,000 homes and
businesses were without power in New York City and Westchester as a
whole, out of a total of 3 million Con Edison customers.
NEW
JERSEY SLAMMED
In
New Jersey, 62 percent of homes were without power, according to the
DOE. New Jersey utility Public Service Electric and Gas (PSE&G)
said in a tweet that it was the "largest storm in PSE&G
history." The company asked customers to be patient as
"unprecedented" flooding threatened to leave homes without
power for days.
Pennsylvania,
Rhode Island, New Hampshire, West Virginia, New York, New Jersey, and
Connecticut all had statewide outages affecting 20 percent or more of
customers, according to the DOE.
One
forecasting company predicted economic losses could ultimately reach
$20 billion nationwide, only half insured.
The
state-owned Long Island Power Authority (LIPA) was one of the hardest
hit utilities, with 85 percent of its 1.1 million customers in New
York without power. It said it could take as long as seven to 10 days
to return power to every customer.
Connecticut
Light and Power's website said 38 percent of its customers were
without power.
Power
providers emphasized that customers must stay away from downed power
lines. One woman in New York City was killed after stepping into an
electrified puddle.
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