The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Power cuts: patients on artificial respirators are not among the “priority customers”

2022-12-06T07:03:02.089Z


They are nevertheless called upon to make themselves known to their ARS. Enedis could provide them with solutions in the event of a power cut.


No one will be spared.

Including patients at “high vital risk”.

This was announced Monday evening by Laurent Méric, spokesperson for Enedis on BFMTV.

"People who are at high vital risk are not among the priority customers defined by the prefectures", according to the representative, about the power cuts which must occur this winter.

The spokesperson explains on BFMTV that patients on artificial respirators will be “non-priority” and “possibly delestable”.

They are called upon to report to their regional health agency (ARS) which will list them with Enedis.

The company should contact them two days before the cut: “We will call them, we will send them an SMS, an email, to see if they have taken precautions.

»

These high-risk patients can then be “helped” and taken “to a place that will not be relieved so that the greatest guarantee is provided to them”.

Read alsoFaced with the risk of power cuts, the concern of patients treated at home

The interministerial crisis unit is working on the hypothesis of six to ten power cuts during the winter, to compensate for the drop in electricity production.

The French will be warned by a red EcoWatt signal sent by RTE, the manager of high and very high voltage lines.

The risk is "a few days of red EcoWatt throughout the winter", warned Xavier Piechaczyk, the chairman of the executive board of RTE on Franceinfo on Thursday, even if it depends "essentially" on the weather.

In the event of high voltages, RTE will send a red EcoWatt signal three days in advance.

If consumption decreases and neighboring countries can supply electricity, the blackout will be avoided.

If this is not enough, load shedding will be confirmed the day before for the next day as a “last resort”.

VIDEO.

Power cuts this winter: what should we expect?

Power cuts would be "inevitable if electricity consumption does not decrease" at peak times of the day (between 8 a.m. and 1 p.m. and between 6 p.m. and 8 p.m.), warns RTE, which forecasts the month of January as the most at risk.

These targeted cuts will last a maximum of two consecutive hours in parts of the departments.

Objective: to avoid the “blackout”, a general breakdown with much more serious consequences.

Source: leparis

All life articles on 2022-12-06

You may like

News/Politics 2024-02-20T07:41:35.724Z
News/Politics 2024-02-25T10:12:22.868Z

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.