September-October 2007

Total Backup Generation

Supermarkets in southern Florida prepare for the next hurricane.

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By George Leposky

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“We take care of our contract customers first,” says Janet Hoose, general manager of Port Consolidated. “It is important to have a contract in place before a hurricane and avoid the problems of trying to find a source of fuel after the storm. We have the ability to send fuel from all of our plants to where it is needed. First we service emergency rescue and our hospital clients, and then the rest of our contract clients.”

Port Consolidated has bulk plants in Fort Lauderdale, Fort Pierce, Jacksonville, Miami, Tampa, and West Palm Beach, FL. The company receives fuel at three major terminals—Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, the Jacksonville Port, and the Port of Tampa—and the smaller fuel terminal at Port Canaveral in Cape Canaveral, FL.

“The Bird Road store has only one electrical feeder, so we designed a system with only one 1,200-amp transfer switch,” says Haggerty. “The Miami Springs store has two electrical feeds, so we designed two transfer switches. One is 800 amps; the other is 1,000 amps. The generators come on automatically once a week and exercise themselves. We provide quarterly maintenance.”

Both new generators were ordered in December 2005. “The total investment for our two new generator systems is about $350,000,” Milam says. “Our Miami Springs generator was supposed to be installed by March of 2006, but the installation wasn’t actually complete until October. Installation at the Redbird store, including inspections, was completed in April 2007. The application and permit process takes a very long time.

“Both of our generators are installed behind high barbed-wire fences, with locked doors and security cameras.”

Publix’s Two Solutions
Publix is meeting the total backup generation challenge with permanent generators at some stores, while at other stores it is installing docking stations to which temporary trailer-mounted generators can be attached.

Publix was founded in 1930 by George W. Jenkins, a Lakeland, FL, grocer. The company grew with Florida’s population during a relatively benign period of hurricane incidence. South Florida was spared major hurricanes for 27 years, from Betsy in 1965 to Andrew in 1992.

Andrew devastated several Publix stores in southern Miami-Dade County, damaged stores elsewhere in the county, and caused widespread power losses.

Publix’s learning curve took another leap following four major 2004 storms—Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne—which collectively affected stores everywhere in the state except southern Florida. Together those storms cost Publix more than $60 million in perishable-food losses.

In 2005, Mother Nature battered South Florida from August through October with three storms—Katrina and Wilma, both of which struck the South Florida mainland, and Rita, which brushed the Florida Keys en route to a landfall on the Texas-Louisiana border.

These storms collectively affected 227 Florida Publix stores from Key West to Vero Beach. After Hurricane Wilma alone, Publix had to discard more than 1,200 truckloads of food worth several hundred million dollars, the largest single storm loss in the company’s history.

Prompted by these losses and by county and municipal ordinances requiring supermarkets to have total backup power, Publix announced on March 13, 2006, that it planned to install 400 stationary and mobile generators at hurricane-prone stores (including 146 at stores in Broward, Miami-Dade, and Monroe counties). Another 175 stores in areas with lower hurricane probability (primarily on Florida’s southeast and southwest coasts, the Florida panhandle, coastal Georgia, and South Carolina) will receive quick-connect docking stations. These stores serve some 575 communities.

Publix said it expected to complete the installations by July 2007 at a cost of about $100 million.

The permanent generators are 500-kW Caterpillar units obtained through PowerSecure in Wake Forest, NC, a provider of interactive distributed generation products and services. The diesel generators have automated turn-on sensors and come with double-lined 1,000-gallon fuel tanks. The trailer-mounted mobile generators have self-contained double-lined 860-gallon diesel fuel tanks.

Typical Publix Installations
Publix’s permanent generators typically are installed close to the store buildings, protected by bollards and security cameras, but they are not fenced and can be easily approached.

Publix Super Markets is using 500-kW Caterpillar generators for backup power at many of its stores.

At Publix’s South Miami store (which actually is in Coral Gables), the generator is in the parking lot, with connections between the generator and the store buried in the ground under fresh blacktop.

At a Publix on Southwest 27th Avenue in Miami, the generator is in the loading dock area, separated from the store by a large cardboard baling machine. A concrete wall shields the area from adjoining homes, but it is open to and visible from the parking lot behind the store.

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Other Publix stores have installed generators in their product delivery areas, or used other available space, sometimes out of public view.    

One Publix store that doesn’t yet have a generator is on LeJeune Road in downtown Coral Gables. It won’t get one until a planned remodeling is complete, which could take years due to stringent local building and zoning requirements. Space at the rear of this store is limited, so it most likely will require a docking station rather than a permanent generator installation.

Author's Bio: George Leposky is a science and technology writer based in Miami, FL.

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