Thursday, November 8, 2012

How to Avoid Fragility and Failure

 

Sandy knocked out power for 8.5 million people, mostly in New York and New Jersey.

Wow.

What’s worse?

A week later, nearly a million people were still without power.

Now, a Nor’easter — a freezing cold version of a tropical storm that plagues New England during the Winter — just dropped nearly a record amount of snow on these same people.

NOTE:  Again.  Any time you hear “record-breaking” in relation to Finance and Weather, it usually isn’t good news.  When you hear it all the time, like we have recently, it’s usually a sign that something is very wrong.

That’s scary.

Of course, it doesn’t have to be this difficult.

A home and community that is resilient can bounce back from a regional disaster like this in seconds, if not hours.

For example, my home and the homes of other people reading this letter right now didn’t suffer an outage when the power went down.

We produced our own power.

Enough for us to serve as islands of resilience for our neighbors that didn’t have this capability.  To help them stay warm, recharge cell phones, take a hot shower, etc….

How?

In my home, we produced power with a generator that’s connected to our natural gas line.  Since it’s connected, it could run for weeks, generating enough power for the entire home indefinitely.

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