SOURCE: VMware
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Atย South by Southwest (SXSW) 2022, Nicola Acutt, vice president of ESG at VMware, discussed theย partnership between the City of Palo Alto and VMwareย on a prototype that will test the potential of microgrids to advance energy resiliency and sustainability efforts at the community and corporate level.
Extreme weather events have increased in severity and duration every year. These have significantly impacted both businesses and communities across the globe and have tested our resiliency. From wildfires in California to ice storms in Texas throughout the past year, power grids all over the U.S. were tested and often failed.
Climate change also impacts local infrastructure and creates a critical challenge for cities to access reliable power to both manage daily risk and to support the community, explained Chief Kenneth Dueker, director of the Office of Emergency Services at theย City of Palo Alto, during the session.
This led VMware andย the cityย to collaborate on something biggerโthe prototype of an innovative microgrid, a local energy grid that can disconnect from the traditional grid and operate autonomously.
The Community Microgrid Is for the Community
Inspired by a vision of a community microgrid that would extend far beyond VMwareโs campus and provide local renewable power and energy storage, the concept also included a first of its kind solution for emergency backup power for mobile emergency response units in the case of a disaster event.
The microgrid prototype encompasses two buildings on VMwareโs campus, supported by two 1 MWh batteries which integrate with existing rooftop solar panels and 100% renewable grid power. Each microgrid has the capability to support the communityโs Mobile Emergency Operations Center (MEOC), providing connectivity and resilient power for its vehicles. These MEOC vehicles can use the VMware microgrid in case of extended power outages or fuel shortages to provide critical communication services.
โMicrogrid technology is not new. The innovation is connecting it to community. Thatโs why we call this a โCommunity Microgrid.โ Weโre building a shared resource,โ Nicola said.
Innovate as You Go
Along the way, the team learned valuable lessons in overcoming resistance to change, expecting the unexpected and innovating as you go.
Nicola and Chief Dueker emphasized two reoccurring themes that stood out the mostโcommunication and collaboration. On a project with so many stakeholders across various organizations, it was paramount to maintain consistent engagement, proactive involvement, transparency and over-communication when navigating obstacles from contracting to permitting to supply chain setbacks during a global pandemic.
Nicola closed the session by looking to the future. โIn order to address a complex, multi-faceted challenge like climate change, we need to come at it at every angle possible at all scalesโfrom individual actions to large, systemic changes.โAt the end of the day, itโs not the technology or the policies alone that will keep our lights onโitโs real people coming together to solve real problems. Thatโs what gives me hope. The reason why climate change canโt knock our lights out is because human ingenuity is a renewable resource,โ she said.
VMware is building a moreย sustainable, equitable and secure futureย by integrating ESG goals across the company and aligning them with its core business strategy, reflected in the companyโsย 2030 Agenda. Learnย moreย about ESG at VMware.
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KEYWORDS: NYSE: VMW, VMware, Nicola Acutt
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