Global copper thefts on rise
by Staff
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That's what thieves know about the 50,000-acre Altamont Wind Resource Area, and the electricity-generating turbines found there. Wind company operators, as well as the Alameda County Sheriff"s Office both say that within the past six months to a year, trespassing and burglaries have increased at the wind farms, with thieves cutting and stealing the copper electrical cables used to operate the 5,400 windmills east of Livermore. "It's getting pretty serious out there," said Rick Koebbe, president of PowerWorks LLC, which operates about 920 windmills in the Altamont. "In the last year, it's gotten pretty bad."
The thefts caused major disruptions for morning commuters on the Epping and Hurstbridge lines. Police today announced they had formed a task force to tackle what they say is a growing problem of scrap metal theft.
While the small-scale theft of copper is commonplace, contractors say a "first" is the recent emergence of armed, organised syndicates who pull kilometres of copper cable, worth millions of rands, out of the ground and sell it. In the past month a wave of armed robberies at various Gauteng construction sites - which police say was committed with help from industry insiders - has led to the loss of well over R1,4-million in copper products used in electrical installations.
Thieves have torn copper facing from a city bridge, and toxic smoke from the clandestine burning of insulation off cables is filling the night sky of some Rome neighbourhoods.
This was how Department of Public Safety Commissioner Rebecca Warfield assessed the situation caused by these “new brand of criminals”-copper wire thieves-who have caused havoc on Saipan in the past few months. “It's horrible!” Commonwealth Utilities Corp. spokesperson Pamela Mathis said of the effect of the thieves' actions, not only on CUC but also on the entire community. |
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