The St. Elizabeths Microgrid: The District’s Newest Microgrid Project Strives to Strengthen Community Resilience

electric power lines

By Faren Bartholomew

A new microgrid is potentially coming to Ward 8 in Washington, D.C. In April 2022, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) funded the new St. Elizabeths microgrid, a project that intends to bolster community resilience by maintaining power at several critical locations in Ward 8 in the event of an outage. FEMA awarded several D.C. agencies $20 million to construct the microgrid through its new Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities grant program (BRIC), designed to fund projects that lower the risks and mitigate the impacts of disasters on communities. The BRIC grant program outlines its guiding principles as “supporting communities through capability- and capacity-building; encouraging and enabling innovation; promoting partnerships; enabling large projects; maintaining flexibility; and providing consistency.” In fiscal year 2020, when BRIC selected St. Elizabeths to receive funding, BRIC had $500 million in available program funding. For fiscal year 2021, BRIC’s program funding doubled, with $1 billion in available funding to distribute to selected resiliency projects for states, territories, and tribes.

Continue reading “The St. Elizabeths Microgrid: The District’s Newest Microgrid Project Strives to Strengthen Community Resilience”