New York’s Rockaway Peninsula Looks to Microgrids to Prepare for the Next Big Hurricane

Another planning result of Superstorm Sandy

New York City’s Rockaway Peninsula took the brunt of Hurricane Sandy when the storm blew ashore a year ago, leaving the Rockaways in Queens devastated from flooding and 34,000 without electricity for weeks.

In the ensuing twelve months, the city has suggested many ways to make itself more able to withstand such storms. As part of New York City’s climate change response plan, “A Stronger, More Resilient New York,” issued earlier this year, one of the city’s suggestions to help the Rockaways survive the next hurricane is for the peninsula to become the site of a microgrid pilot project that will help keep the lights on at hospitals, schools and other critical infrastructure during and after a storm.

The Rockaways, which sits at the terminus of the Long Island Power Authority’s grid in the area, is ideal for a microgrid project because it’s congested and highly vulnerable to flooding during major storms, with a high probability of being devastated again in a future storm, said Tom Bourgeois, deputy director of the Pace Energy and Climate Center at Pace Law School.

Generally, a microgrid works like this: When power is lost across an area’s electric grid, some public services and critical private businesses could be linked with their own self-contained power lines using power generated nearby, via either distributed generation such as rooftop solar panels and small wind turbines, or a small centralized power source such as a natural gas power plant. Many microgrids can be “islanded,” which means they can operate independently from the larger grid when the power goes out, keeping the lights on for those who are connected to the microgrid.

“As Superstorm Sandy demonstrated, the Rockaways is a highly vulnerable, densely populated area of the grid,” said Jackson Morris, director of strategic engagement at Pace Energy and Climate Center. “A microgrid that is more resilient and has the ability to ‘island’ makes [the Rockaways] a strong candidate for a microgrid kind of approach.”

With that in mind, the city’s resiliency plan calls for its officials to work with the U.S. Department of Energy, the New York State Smart Grid Consortium, and state agencies to study the feasibility of microgrids for the Rockaways and other storm-vulnerable places throughout the city.

“We’re focusing on clusters of critical facilities that would help enhance public facilities in an emergency event -- public housing, other critical assets, telecom switching hubs, wastewater treatment plants,” said Sergej Mahnovski, director of the Mayor's Office of Long Term Planning and Sustainability.

No specific project has been announced yet, and city officials declined to talk about details of what a project might look like or how long it will be before any details of a microgrid pilot project are announced.

Queens Borough officials said they would welcome any proposals for projects that would help keep the power on in the Rockaways when the next storm barrels through.

“We generally support anything that protects our power delivery system,” said Michael Scholl, spokesperson for the Queens Borough President’s office. “We welcome any study that investigates microgrids.”

***

Bobby Magill is a senior science writer for Climate Central, focusing on energy and climate change. This piece was originally published at Climate Central and was reprinted with permission.

A recent Clean Energy Connections event featured Tom Bourgeois and Serhej Mahnovski in a discussion of what's next in New York City's resiliency plan. Watch it here: