Riverside Transmission Reliability Project (RTRP)

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The Riverside Transmission Reliability Project (RTRP) will provide the City of Riverside with a critical second power connection to the California electric grid. The City of Riverside is working with its partner, Southern California Edison, to establish the second power connection to the statewide power grid in order to meet the needs of additional power capacity and to serve existing and projected electrical demand in the city. This project will ensure Riverside’s hospitals, trauma centers, jails, fire stations, traffic signals, universities, schools, colleges, businesses and families have reliable energy should there be any type of natural disaster, accident, or any other unanticipated event.

Why is it important?

Currently, all of RPU's imported energy comes through a single power connection from Southern California Edison's (SCE) Vista Substation, located in the city of Grand Terrace. Through that connection, only a certain amount of energy, 557 megawatts (MW), can reach the city.

If the electrical needs of RPU customers exceed that amount of energy, there is not any way to bring additional power into Riverside, as there are no other outside connections. While over the past ten years RPU has built a number of power generation plants within the city that can help supply extra energy in time of peak demands and emergencies, they do not provide reliable, long-term solutions to the city's capacity shortage, nor will they be enough to meet current and projected energy load growth.

The RTRP would create a second connection to outside power lines, and a second substation, that would reduce dependence on a single substation and connection, increase the amount of energy RPU could import, and provide greater flexibility to expand our energy delivery system to meet Riverside's growing energy needs well into the future.

The Riverside Transmission Reliability Project (RTRP) will provide the City of Riverside with a critical second power connection to the California electric grid. The City of Riverside is working with its partner, Southern California Edison, to establish the second power connection to the statewide power grid in order to meet the needs of additional power capacity and to serve existing and projected electrical demand in the city. This project will ensure Riverside’s hospitals, trauma centers, jails, fire stations, traffic signals, universities, schools, colleges, businesses and families have reliable energy should there be any type of natural disaster, accident, or any other unanticipated event.

Why is it important?

Currently, all of RPU's imported energy comes through a single power connection from Southern California Edison's (SCE) Vista Substation, located in the city of Grand Terrace. Through that connection, only a certain amount of energy, 557 megawatts (MW), can reach the city.

If the electrical needs of RPU customers exceed that amount of energy, there is not any way to bring additional power into Riverside, as there are no other outside connections. While over the past ten years RPU has built a number of power generation plants within the city that can help supply extra energy in time of peak demands and emergencies, they do not provide reliable, long-term solutions to the city's capacity shortage, nor will they be enough to meet current and projected energy load growth.

The RTRP would create a second connection to outside power lines, and a second substation, that would reduce dependence on a single substation and connection, increase the amount of energy RPU could import, and provide greater flexibility to expand our energy delivery system to meet Riverside's growing energy needs well into the future.

Have questions about this project? Contribute to our FAQs by asking your question here!

You can see the common questions we've already documented about this project in the right-hand section of this project page. You can also find them in this PDF here

If you have a question that is not already answered, please submit it so we can provide you with an official answer.

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  • Share Will the RTRP (while being built) disrupt our current power supply to the city? Do we need to plan for periodic outages? on Facebook Share Will the RTRP (while being built) disrupt our current power supply to the city? Do we need to plan for periodic outages? on Twitter Share Will the RTRP (while being built) disrupt our current power supply to the city? Do we need to plan for periodic outages? on Linkedin Email Will the RTRP (while being built) disrupt our current power supply to the city? Do we need to plan for periodic outages? link

    Will the RTRP (while being built) disrupt our current power supply to the city? Do we need to plan for periodic outages?

    24 days ago

    There will be no loss of service or disruption to the service you currently receive throughout the life of this project. The secondary feed provided through this project is planned to be constructed in its entirety and then upon completion connected to an automatic switchgear device that will be utilized for switching between the primary and secondary feeds ONLY in the instance of a power failure from the primary feed

Page last updated: 13 Jun 2025, 07:32 AM