2022 Oklahoma Power Outage Report
In 2022, the average Oklahoma customer went without power for about 3.5 hours — the 31st worst of any US state that year, below the state's decade average. Figures from DOE/ORNL EAGLE-I.
Avg hrs / customer
3.5
Peak customers out
21,623
Rank (worst state)
31st
Counties affected
20
Oklahoma outages over the decade
Average hours without power per customer, 2022 highlighted.
Hardest-hit Oklahoma counties in 2022
By peak customers out during the year's worst event.
1Oklahoma County21,6232Tulsa County13,7833Le Flore County10,3654Canadian County9,8175Seminole County8,8436Bryan County8,7177Marshall County8,4578Grady County7,4359Caddo County6,88110Cleveland County6,27511Pontotoc County5,90412Comanche County5,69413McIntosh County5,62014Lincoln County5,46915Muskogee County5,35016Pittsburg County5,26017Sequoyah County5,07518Custer County4,97319Okmulgee County4,48920Delaware County4,043
Biggest Oklahoma outages of 2022
| County | Began | Peak customers out |
|---|---|---|
| Oklahoma County | November 1, 2022 | 21,623 |
| Oklahoma County | February 14, 2022 | 20,845 |
| Tulsa County | February 26, 2022 | 13,783 |
| Oklahoma County | July 8, 2022 | 13,749 |
| Tulsa County | July 26, 2022 | 13,539 |
| Oklahoma County | July 27, 2022 | 12,809 |
| Oklahoma County | May 2, 2022 | 12,648 |
| Le Flore County | July 29, 2022 | 10,365 |
| Oklahoma County | January 1, 2022 | 9,965 |
| Canadian County | August 29, 2022 | 9,817 |
Part of the 2022 US Power Outage Report. Source: DOE/ORNL EAGLE-I. “Avg hours per customer” is a SAIDI-like measure (outage customer-minutes ÷ tracked customers); coverage varies by year.