2012
DOI: 10.1029/2012sw000806
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Geomagnetically induced currents in the New Zealand power network

Abstract: Adverse space weather conditions have been shown to be directly responsible for faults within power networks at high latitudes. A number of studies have also shown space weather to impact power networks at lower latitudes, although most of these studies show increases in GIC activity within networks not directly related to hardware faults. This study examines a GIC event that occurred in New Zealand's South Island power network on 6th November 2001. A transformer failure that occurred during this day is shown … Show more

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Cited by 119 publications
(160 citation statements)
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“…Examples are available from Australia (Marshall et al 2011), New Zealand (Marshall et al 2012), South Africa (Ngwira et al 2008) and Brazil (Trivedi et al 2007). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Examples are available from Australia (Marshall et al 2011), New Zealand (Marshall et al 2012), South Africa (Ngwira et al 2008) and Brazil (Trivedi et al 2007). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kappenman 2003;Trivedi et al 2007;Marshall et al 2012;Zhang et al 2015;Barbosa et al 2015;Watari 2015). The presence of the enhanced ring current during storms may be directly related to the GIC generation at these latitudes.…”
Section: Ring Current and Gicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The SvSW event on February 11, 1958 (event 3), which caused fire and severe damages in the telegraph systems in Sweden (e.g., Wik et al 2009), also produced an extreme storm (mean Dst MP = −275 nT). The SvSW events on Nov 06, 2001 andOct 30, 2003 (events 4 and5) caused power outages in New Zealand (Marshall et al 2012) and Sweden (e.g., Wik et al 2009) and produced extreme storms (mean Dst MP < −255 nT).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%