Volunteers bring solar power to Hurricane Helene's disaster zone
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[October 14, 2024]
By GABRIELA AOUN ANGUEIRA
BAKERSVILLE, N.C. (AP) — Nearly two weeks after Hurricane Helene downed
power lines and washed out roads all over North Carolina's mountains,
the constant din of a gas-powered generator is getting to be too much
for Bobby Renfro.
It’s difficult to hear the nurses, neighbors and volunteers flowing
through the community resource hub he has set up in a former church for
his neighbors in Tipton Hill, a crossroads in the Pisgah National Forest
north of Asheville. Much worse is the cost: he spent $1,200 to buy it
and thousands more on fuel that volunteers drive in from Tennessee.
Turning off their only power source isn’t an option. This generator runs
a refrigerator holding insulin for neighbors with diabetes and powers
the oxygen machines and nebulizers some of them need to breathe.
The retired railroad worker worries that outsiders don’t understand how
desperate they are, marooned without power on hilltops and down in
“hollers."
“We have no resources for nothing,” Renfro said. “It's going to be a
long ordeal.”
About 23,500 of the 1.5 million customers that lost power in western
North Carolina still lacked electricity on Sunday, according to
Poweroutage.us. Without it, they can’t keep medicines cold or power
medical equipment or pump well water. They can't recharge their phones
or apply for federal disaster aid.
Crews from all over the country and even Canada are helping Duke Energy
and local electric cooperatives with repairs, but it's slow going in the
dense mountain forests, where some roads and bridges are completely
washed away.
“The crews aren’t doing what they typically do, which is a repair
effort. They’re rebuilding from the ground up," said Kristie Aldridge,
vice president of communications at North Carolina Electric
Cooperatives.
Residents who can get their hands on gas and diesel-powered generators
are depending on them, but that is not easy. Fuel is expensive and can
be a long drive away. Generator fumes pollute and can be deadly. Small
home generators are designed to run for hours or days, not weeks and
months.
Now, more help is arriving. Renfro received a new power source this
week, one that will be cleaner, quieter and free to operate. Volunteers
with the nonprofit Footprint Project and a local solar installation
company delivered a solar generator with six 245-watt solar panels, a
24-volt battery and an AC power inverter. The panels now rest on a
grassy hill outside the community building.
Renfro hopes his community can draw some comfort and security, "seeing
and knowing that they have a little electricity.”
The Footprint Project is scaling up its response to this disaster with
sustainable mobile infrastructure. It has deployed dozens of larger
solar microgrids, solar generators and machines that can pull water from
the air to 33 sites so far, along with dozens of smaller portable
batteries.
With donations from solar equipment and installation companies as well
as equipment purchased through donated funds, the nonprofit is sourcing
hundreds more small batteries and dozens of other larger systems and
even industrial-scale solar generators known as “Dragon Wings.”
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Henry Kovacs, left, and Hayden Wilson, right, volunteers with the
Footprint Project, load two Tesla Powerwall batteries to deliver to
communities impacted by Hurricane Helene in Mars Hill, N.C. on Oct.
9, 2024. (AP Photo/Gabriela Aoun Angueria)
Will Heegaard and Jamie Swezey are the husband-and-wife team behind
Project Footprint. Heegaard founded it in 2018 in New Orleans with a
mission of reducing the greenhouse gas emissions of emergency
responses. Helene’s destruction is so catastrophic, however, that
Swezey said this work is more about supplementing generators than
replacing them.
“I’ve never seen anything like this,” Swezey said as she stared at a
whiteboard with scribbled lists of requests, volunteers and
equipment. “It’s all hands on deck with whatever you can use to
power whatever you need to power.”
Down near the interstate in Mars Hill, a warehouse owner let Swezey
and Heegaard set up operations and sleep inside. They rise each
morning triaging emails and texts from all over the region. Requests
for equipment range from individuals needing to power a home oxygen
machine to makeshift clinics and community hubs distributing
supplies.
Local volunteers help. Hayden Wilson and Henry Kovacs, glassblowers
from Asheville, arrived in a pickup truck and trailer to make
deliveries this week. Two installers from the Asheville-based solar
company Sundance Power Systems followed in a van.
It took them more than an hour on winding roads to reach
Bakersville, where the community hub Julie Wiggins runs in her
driveway supports about 30 nearby families. It took many of her
neighbors days to reach her, cutting their way out through fallen
trees. Some were so desperate, they stuck their insulin in the creek
to keep it cold.
Panels and a battery from Footprint Project now power her small
fridge, a water pump and a Starlink communications system she set
up. “This is a game changer,” Wiggins said.
The volunteers then drove to Renfro’s hub in Tipton Hill before
their last stop at a Bakersville church that has been running two
generators. Other places are much harder to reach. Heegaard and
Swezey even tried to figure out how many portable batteries a mule
could carry up a mountain and have arranged for some to be lowered
by helicopters.
They know the stakes are high after Heegaard volunteered in Puerto
Rico, where Hurricane Maria's death toll rose to 3,000 as some
mountain communities went without power for 11 months. Duke Energy
crews also restored infrastructure in Puerto Rico and are using
tactics learned there, like using helicopters to drop in new
electric poles, utility spokesman Bill Norton said.
The hardest customers to help could be people whose homes and
businesses are too damaged to connect, and they are why the
Footprint Project will stay in the area for as long as they are
needed, Swezey said.
“We know there are people who will need help long after the power
comes back,” she said.
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