Cascading failures in power systems propagate non-locally, making the control
and mitigation of outages extremely hard. In this work, we use the emerging
concept of the tree partition of transmission networks to provide an analytical
characterization of line failure localizability in transmission systems. Our
results rigorously establish the well perceived intuition in power community
that failures cannot cross bridges, and reveal a finer-grained concept that
encodes more precise information on failure propagations within tree-partition
regions. Specifically, when a non-bridge line is tripped, the impact of this
failure only propagates within well-defined components, which we refer to as
cells, of the tree partition defined by the bridges. In contrast, when a bridge
line is tripped, the impact of this failure propagates globally across the
network, affecting the power flow on all remaining transmission lines. This
characterization suggests that it is possible to improve the system robustness
by temporarily switching off certain transmission lines, so as to create more,
smaller components in the tree partition; thus spatially localizing line
failures and making the grid less vulnerable to large-scale outages. We
illustrate this approach using the IEEE 118-bus test system and demonstrate
that switching off a negligible portion of transmission lines allows the impact
of line failures to be significantly more localized without substantial changes
in line congestion