January-February 2007

A Balance of Power

For 11 powerless days after Hurricane Wilma, backup generators kept a unique shrimp farm operating.

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By George Leposky

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“These generators have modern digital control systems that provide proper protection of the equipment,” Gillette says. “An alarm will sound when necessary, and in the extreme, if some parameter is outside nominal limits and the equipment is in jeopardy, the controls will shut it down.”

Wilson says the ammonia buildup in the ponds would begin to affect the shrimp after an hour or so, but they can manage for a few minutes until the backup generators begin operating. Wilson and Gillette agree that OceanBoy doesn’t need an uninterruptible system, such as a hospital might install. Uninterruptible power would cost thousands of dollars more and require additional maintenance.

“In a true uninterruptible scenario,” Gillette says, “a battery pack takes over once the voltage starts to sag. The batteries will sustain operation for several minutes while the generator starts up and begins running. Then a handoff from the batteries to the generator occurs. The generator provides power until you no longer need it, while recharging the batteries.”

Fuel a Limiting Factor
At LaBelle Farm, Hurricane Wilma destroyed 70% of the hatchery. Only one of the in-ground ponds for juvenile shrimp survived, and its backup generator saved the shrimp there.

The corporate office just outside Clewiston was heavily damaged, having lost exterior siding, doors, and signage. The processing plant had roof damage but never shut down. By day’s end the roof was repaired, and shrimp processing resumed the next day.

When Hurricane Wilma struck, OceanBoy had harvested 90% of its shrimp crop. Only two ponds at LaBelle Farm and four at Little Cypress Farm were occupied. Backup generators came on in all of the ponds. As soon as the winds subsided to a safe level, electricians were dispatched to make sure all of the backup generators were operating, to fill their fuel tanks, and to place pumps in strategic locations.

Wilma’s heavy rains had filled the ponds to near overflowing. “We had to draw the water levels down 2 to 3 feet on some of the ponds. The drainage canals around Little Cypress Farm were all at their highest level, and we had standing water everywhere on that property,” Wilson says.

As soon as possible, the service staff at both farms shut down all nonessential generators. In the days that followed, as fuel supplies dwindled, the staff transferred fuel from the idle generators to the ones that were running—a maneuver that proved crucial to the survival of the remaining shrimp.

“After 11 days without primary power, we were within hours of our backup-generator power going down due to lack of fuel,” Wilson reports. “Our bulk fuel distributor in LaBelle had no power and couldn’t pump fuel into tankers, and the highway the tankers would use was blocked anyway. We put 55-gallon tanks in pickup trucks, went to the distributor to get fuel, and drove it to Little Cypress Farm using a roundabout route along back roads.”

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Each of the generators at Little Cypress Farm has a 250-gallon tank that holds enough fuel for 12 hours of operation. OceanBoy keeps 6,000 gallons of backup diesel fuel at Little Cypress Farm, but that wouldn’t have been enough if the farm had needed to run all of its generators through the entire outage.

To move the fuel from storage to the generators, OceanBoy uses a trailer with a 250-gallon tank and an electric pump, hauled behind a 1-ton service truck with storage boxes containing repair parts for generators, pumps, and other farm equipment. The truck’s electrical system powers the pump on the fuel trailer. Next Page >

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