Factors of Success in Storm Robustness: Design and Installation Best Practices  

Education Type: 
On-Demand
Duration: 
1 hour
Level: 
Intermediate
FEMP IACET: 
0.2 CEU
Sponsored by: 

DOE Federal Energy Management Program - FEMP

Agencies with sites located in climates that experience regular severe weather events face unique challenges when procuring new onsite solar PV and battery storage systems. Similarly, maintaining systems in these climates poses unique challenges. The main challenges for agency managers procuring new systems are to ensure that systems are appropriately engineered for expected site weather conditions. Codes and standards still lag behind field experience, requiring project engineers to utilize complementing engineering guidance. Understanding how to ensure that engineering guidance has been incorporated is an important step during the submittal review.

Instructors

Gerald Robinson, Program Manager, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory  

Gerald Robinson is an Energy manager with over 25 years' experience initiating and completing a broad range of energy efficiency, water conservation, and renewable energy system initiatives. Gerald has an extensive track record of innovative yet practical problem solving in both the private and public sectors. Gerald's management experience spans a wide variety of organizations including universities, municipalities, large corporations, non-governmental organizations, and federal agencies. He has gained an extensive knowledge of all phases of project development and implementation including, legal & regulatory, engineering, project finance, audits, system commissioning, specifications writing, construction management and commissioning.
Gerald is an ardent customer advocate able to work with a wide variety of stakeholders. He acts in the role of agency technical advocate drawing upon his background not only as an energy manager but also as a plant manager while at Loyola Marymount University (LMU) where he led the university through many multi-million-dollar utility infrastructure modernization and planning projects.

James Elseworth, Research Engineer, NREL  

James Elseworth is a research engineer in the Integrated Applications Center at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL). His work focuses on engineering and economic analysis of renewable energy and energy efficiency. Recently, he has focused on resilience of power systems, especially with regards to severe weather survivability. He has a M.S. in Mechanical Engineering from University of Colorado-Boulder and a B.S. in Biomedical Engineering from Brown University.

Learning Objectives

Upon completion of this training, attendees will be able to:

  • Recognize how to develop a solicitation and contract that results in a weather-durable system by incorporating specifications and terms intended to increase system robustness;
  • Learn about considerations that can be added to each phase of a project, solicitation, design, submittal reviews, construction, and commissioning;
  • Identify the basics of relevant codes and important code gaps that need to be addressed through additional engineering guidance;
  • Identify how to verify that important system robustness elements have been incorporated in designs;
  • Identify how to add commissioning requirements to confirm the proper installation of key system components; and
  • Recognize what considerations the General Service Administration added to the rebuild of a 450 kW solar array in St. Croix, USVI.
Federal Agencies and Facility Criteria: