The idea was first floated—on a limited scale—after the Super Cyclone of October 1999 that left swathes of coastal Odisha without power for weeks. But over two decades later, a cyclone-proof power system along the coastal belt that is routinely ravaged by cyclones remains a pipedream. Cyclone Yaas, which whiplashed the northern coast last week, is a reminder that such a project brooks no delay. The idea was old but the real push for cyclone-resilient power infrastructure gained motion after Cyclone Phailin in 2013, which devastated the grid in south Odisha. In the wake of Phailin, a five-year plan was drawn up in 2015-16 to do away with electric poles, easy prey for a cyclone, and lay underground cables along the coast. The plan was to put all 33 kV and 11 kV power lines below the surface. In the first year, Rs 350 crore of the Rs 1, 500 crore project was sanctioned.