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・ 1999 South American Championships in Athletics
・ 1999 South American Championships in Athletics – Results
・ 1999 South American Cross Country Championships
・ 1999 South American Junior Championships in Athletics
・ 1999 South American U-20 Championship
・ 1999 South American Under-17 Football Championship
・ 1999 South American Youth Championship squads
・ 1999 South Asian Football Federation Gold Cup
・ 1999 South Asian Games
・ 1999 South Carolina Gamecocks football team
・ 1999 South Dakota Learjet crash
・ 1999 South Florida Bulls football team
・ 1999 South Pacific Games
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・ 1999 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament
1999 Southern Brazil blackout
・ 1999 Southern Conference Baseball Tournament
・ 1999 Southern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
・ 1999 Spanish Grand Prix
・ 1999 Spanish motorcycle Grand Prix
・ 1999 Sparkassen Cup (tennis)
・ 1999 Sparkassen Cup on Ice
・ 1999 Sparkassen Cup – Doubles
・ 1999 Sparkassen Cup – Singles
・ 1999 Special Olympics World Summer Games
・ 1999 SpeedVision World Challenge season
・ 1999 Speedway Grand Prix
・ 1999 Speedway Grand Prix of Czech Republic
・ 1999 Speedway Grand Prix of Denmark
・ 1999 Speedway Grand Prix of Great Britain


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1999 Southern Brazil blackout : ウィキペディア英語版
1999 Southern Brazil blackout
The 1999 Southern Brazil blackout was a widespread power outage (the largest ever at the time) that occurred in Brazil on March 11, 1999. The blackout involved São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Minas Gerais, Goiás, Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul and Rio Grande do Sul, affecting an estimated 75 to 97 million people. A chain reaction was started when a lightning strike occurred at 22h 16m at an electricity substation in Bauru, São Paulo State causing most of the 440kV circuits at the substation to trip. Brazil was undergoing a severe investment crisis during 1999, which limited spending on maintenance and expansion of the power grid. With few routes for the power to flow from the generating stations via the 440kV system (a very important system to São Paulo state, carrying electricity generated by the Paraná river) a lot of generators automatically shut down because they did not have any load. The world's biggest power plant at the time, Itaipu, tried to support the load that was no longer being supplied by the 440kV power plants, but the 750kV AC lines and the 600kV DC lines that connected the plant to the rest of the system could not take the load and tripped too.
South of São Paulo the consumers experienced an overfrequency, caused because they had more generation than load, mostly because Itaipu was now connected only to this sub-system, but that problem was automatically solved by all generators in the area, that reduced their loads.
The rest of the system experienced a much bigger problem, an underfrequency, since the system had a lot of load and not enough generation capacity. Some generators tripped because of the overfrequency, which aggravated the problem, and after an automatic rejection of 35% of the sub-system load the underfrequency did not go away. This caused the system to break in many pieces, São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro states were split with a few areas remaining online. Most of the Minas Gerais system remained online, and powered Brazil's capital, Brasília, as well as the state of Goias and some of Espirito Santo.
In Rio the military police placed 1,200 men in the streets to avoid looting. In São Paulo, traffic authorities announced they closed the city's tunnels to prevent assaults. More than 60,000 people were on Rio's subway when lights went out.
At midnight, power began returning to some areas.
==See also==

* List of power outages
* Energy policy of Brazil

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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