Abhijit Padihari
New Member
On 30 and 31st July 2012, India faced the largest power outage in the history. It blackout affected about half of India’s population / 9% of the world population, which spread across 22 states in India. 32 gig watts of generating capacity were taken offline due to this outage; about300 million people had no electricity at all for at least 8 hours.
The busiest airports and railways in the northern region were completely shut down. Traffic signals were non-operational which caused chaos in the minds of people. Major hospitals across the states, faced interruptions in health services, most of them relied on back-up generators. Water treatment plans were totally off due to which millions were unable to draw water by the help of electric pumps. Over 200 miners were trapped underground due to lift failure. More than 300 intercity trains were called off. Delhi, Kolkata’s metro were shut down. Half of India was completely paralyzed.
The busiest airports and railways in the northern region were completely shut down. Traffic signals were non-operational which caused chaos in the minds of people. Major hospitals across the states, faced interruptions in health services, most of them relied on back-up generators. Water treatment plans were totally off due to which millions were unable to draw water by the help of electric pumps. Over 200 miners were trapped underground due to lift failure. More than 300 intercity trains were called off. Delhi, Kolkata’s metro were shut down. Half of India was completely paralyzed.