About 220,000 Georgia utility customers are without power Tuesday morning as falling trees caused by the winter storm snapped power lines faster than crews could restore electricity.

Georgia Power, the state’s largest utility, reported more than 92,000 customers were without power at 4:45 a.m., but that number had fallen to 89,000 customer outages as of 5:45 a.m., according to its outage map. Separately, Georgia’s Electrical Membership Cooperatives, the trade organization for the state’s EMCs, reported about 134,000 customers without power about 5 a.m.

As of 5:45 a.m., about 220,000 customers are without power.

The bulk of the outages for both Georgia Power and the EMCs appear to be in Northeast Georgia, largely along the I-85 corridor and points north.

Lawrenceville, Suwanee, Gainesville, Lula and Cornelia all showed high numbers of outages on the Georgia Power map. Jackson EMC reported its heaviest numbers of outages in Hall, Jackson and Gwinnett counties. The Ga. 316 corridor to Athens and further to the east also showed many outages, with thousands without power in Barrow, Banks, Clarke and Madison counties.

On its website, Amicalola EMC reported heavy outages in Lumpkin, Cherokee and Dawson counties.

In a news release, the EMCs reported that much of its issues have been with fallen trees affected by ice. Thousands of EMC customers have had their power restored, but tree damage has caused the number of outages to spike. Much of the heaviest accumulation of ice and damage to the power infrastructure has been in Banks, Cherokee, Dawson, Forsyth, Gwinnett, Hall, Jackson, Lumpkin, Pickens and Towns counties, the EMCs said.

The EMCs said they will have another update around 10 a.m.

About the Author

Keep Reading

Blue heron are just one of the hundreds of kinds of animals and plants that call the Okefenokee Swamp home. (Hyosub Shin/AJC)

Credit: HYOSUB SHIN / AJC

Featured

The renovation of Jekyll Island's Great Dunes golf course includes nine holes designed by Walter Travis in the 1920s for the members of the Jekyll Island Club. Several holes that were part of the original layout where located along the beach and were bulldozed in the 1950s.(Photo by Austin Kaseman)

Credit: Photo by Austin Kaseman