The Virginia Department of Emergency Management (VDEM) recently announced that it was awarded a federal grant to proceed with a planning and scoping project that will investigate the potential use of mobile energy storage systems to provide backup power to support critical infrastructure in rural, Tribal or disadvantaged communities during natural disasters or other catastrophic events.
This project was awarded under the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Building Resilient Infrastructure & Communities (BRIC) grant program for FY2021.
The scoping project is a jointly developed infrastructure mitigation effort conducted by VDEM, Dominion Energy Virginia, the All Hazards Consortium (501c3), and multiple partners and national trade associations.
This scoping project will support the proposal to use energy storage technologies to leverage a mobile battery system, referred to as the Green Power On-Demand System (GPODS), to support the community’s electric grid during normal conditions but could also be deployed to predetermined locations to provide backup power during a natural disaster or other catastrophic event.
This new energy storage capability can help multiple rural, Tribal, or disadvantaged communities to better cope with, and recover faster from, power outages by ensuring that the essential infrastructure services, such as water, communications, transportation, fuel, etc. and community services, such as shelters, feeding/warming/cooling stations, healthcare, transportation, public safety, etc. can continue to operate during a disaster.
This will help reduce or eliminate hardships and suffering during a catastrophic incident for residents while reducing economic losses for businesses that provide jobs and goods/services to the communities.
The GPODS system will be governed by the state/local emergency managers and owned, operated, maintained, and managed by - Dominion Energy Virginia.