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Kula Wildfire Thwarted; Water Crisis


Nepalnews
AP
2023 Oct 01, 10:21,
Kyle Ellison stands in front of a fallen tree on Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2023, in Kula, Hawaii. As high winds whipped burning trees and grass, Ellison and his landlord struggled with plummeting water pressure. Ellison had to wait for pots to slowly fill in the sink before running them to the fire; his landlord wielded a garden hose with little more than a trickle. (AP Photo/Mengshin Lin)

Hours before devastating fires scorched the historic town of Lahaina on Maui, Kyle Ellison labored to save his rental house in Kula, a rural mountain town 24 miles away, from a different blaze.

As high winds whipped burning trees and grass, Ellison and his landlord struggled with plummeting water pressure. Ellison had to wait for pots to slowly fill in the sink before running them to the fire; his landlord wielded a garden hose with little more than a trickle. Firefighters had to rush away for half-hour stretches to find a working fire hydrant to refill their tanker, and every time they did, the fire gained.

“It’s a very disconcerting feeling when the fire department shows up and they don’t have water,” Ellison said.

The lack of backup power for critical pumps seriously hindered firefighting in Kula, county water director John Stufflebean told The Associated Press. Once the winds knocked out electricity, pumps were unable to push water up into tanks and reservoirs that were key to maintaining pressure.

“If all those (pumps) had had generators, I think there is a pretty good chance we could have kept up,” Stufflebean said.

A water tank on Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2023, in Kula, Hawaii, that was part of a system that lost pressure during wildfires. A lack of backup power for critical pumps seriously hindered firefighting in Kula, county water director John Stufflebean told The Associated Press. Once the winds knocked out electricity, pumps were unable to push water up into tanks and reservoirs that were key to maintaining pressure. 

A water tank on Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2023, in Kula, Hawaii, that was part of a system that lost pressure during wildfires. (AP Photo/Mengshin Lin)
A water tank on Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2023, in Kula, Hawaii, that was part of a system that lost pressure during wildfires. (AP Photo/Mengshin Lin)
Water is available at a distribution hub by Kula Lodge on Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2023, in Kula, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Mengshin Lin)
Water is available at a distribution hub by Kula Lodge on Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2023, in Kula, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Mengshin Lin)

Kula’s experience exposed a common vulnerability in the U.S., where many water systems don’t have sufficient backup power to guarantee pressure if fires, storms or cold take electricity offline for long periods. Besides hamstringing firefighting, the lack of pressure can make water systems vulnerable to contamination that jeopardizes clean drinking water.

The impact of August’s fires in Kula was far smaller than in Lahaina, where at least 97 people were killed and some 2,200 buildings destroyed in a fire so hot that thousands of water pipes melted. More generators wouldn’t have made a difference there, Stufflebean said. But it might have in Kula, where no one died and a few dozen buildings burned.

Experts said backup power systems are expensive. The Environmental Protection Agency, which enforces clean drinking water standards, recommends but doesn’t require utilities to have backup systems — even as climate change is leading to more frequent and damaging extreme weather events.


Kyle Ellison drives to the other side of a gorge Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2023, in Kula, Hawaii. to show the damage from wildfires. As high winds whipped burning trees and grass, Ellison and his landlord struggled with plummeting water pressure. Ellison had to wait for pots to slowly fill in the sink before running them to the fire; his landlord wielded a garden hose with little more than a trickle. (AP Photo/Mengshin Lin)
Kyle Ellison drives to the other side of a gorge Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2023, in Kula, Hawaii. to show the damage from wildfires. As high winds whipped burning trees and grass, Ellison and his landlord struggled with plummeting water pressure. Ellison had to wait for pots to slowly fill in the sink before running them to the fire; his landlord wielded a garden hose with little more than a trickle. (AP Photo/Mengshin Lin)

“Right now, a robust national study to understand the degree of that vulnerability is what’s needed,” said Alan Roberson, executive director of the Association of State Drinking Water Administrators.

The fire wasn’t the first time Kula’s lack of backup power was exposed. A 2021 storm knocked out power for several days, and without enough water pressure, bacteria got into pipes that took months to clear.

Stufflebean, who became director of Maui’s water systems in January, said it would cost about $12 million to install the generators needed. He says the department will buy several diesel generators and seeks outside funding for others, but “we may need to live with whatever we can get.”

“It really comes down to funding,” he said. “The Maui water supply department has been underfunded for decades.”


READ ALSO:

hours devastating fires Lahaina Maui Kyle Ellison Kula mountain town plummeting water fire department Electricity
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