Security and Resilience

Climate change threatens the safety and security of billions of people around the world. But we can build more secure, resilient and peaceful communities, countries, and systems by eliminating dependence on fossil fuels and aging centralized energy infrastructure, and shifting toward clean, distributed renewable energy sources today.

57
M
barrels of oil imported each day globally
202.6
B
in damages caused by the '17 hurricane season
328
days to fully restore electricity in Puerto Rico post Hurricane Maria
Why

Dependence on fossil fuels and centralized electricity infrastructures puts countries at risk, and fuels war and conflict. We can stabilize nations and protect communities with clean, distributed energy resources.

The 2017 hurricane season was the most active in history, bringing widespread destruction. In addition to the emotional toll these severe storms had on people in impacted areas, the disruption of critical infrastructure left many communities without basic services such as electricity and water for prolonged periods of time. Transitioning to a clean energy future will not only curb climate change and help to mitigate its devastating effects, but it can also address the security risks than are at the root of our fossil fuel addiction. Global dependence on oil destabilizes global security. Our centralized energy infrastructure is vulnerable to cascading blackouts caused by natural disaster, accident, or malice. A more efficient, diverse, dispersed, localized, and renewable energy supply can create a more resilient and secure energy system, and help keep the lights on.

Improving Military Resiliency with Efficiency and Microgrids

U.S. military dependence on fossil fuels poses a huge national security threat to our military overseas and at home. For this reason, a 2016 e-Lab Accelerator team focused on energy efficiency and renewable energy microgrids for the military. The Air Force Energy Assurance team’s goal is to secure competitively priced and reliable electricity for critical mission areas. The team—composed of experts in facility management, operations, defense, and energy and environment—stresses the role that projects like these play in broader resilience and security efforts across the military.

The Byron Rogers Federal Building, courtesy of the GSA

Improving Performance of Federal Facilities

U.S. federal buildings represent the largest aggregate building portfolio in the world, accounting for billions of square feet in real estate. They not only provide space for hundreds of thousands of employees to provide critical services to our country, they also represent a significant opportunity to support mission effectiveness and infrastructure resilience. RMI serves as a contractor for leading federal agencies providing strategic advising with on-the-ground execution support to meet and exceed these important goals with no cost to taxpayers.

Photo credit: Irene Angwenyi / USAID Kenya

man looking at lightbulb

Minigrids for Reliable Power in Africa

Many businesses and communities in sub-Saharan Africa are powered by diesel generators, when they are powered at all. Power is unreliable and intermittent. But as a growing number of projects show, businesses can receive more secure and reliable power from a local minigrid, an isolated distribution network powered by solar and battery storage. And it’s not just local businesses that are receiving power; residential customers are connecting to the minigrid, too, and hundreds more will connect over the next few years. This approach not only provides energy security, but also drives economic growth in rural areas, and is being replicated across sub-Saharan Africa and southern Asia.

Redefining Resilience for Islands

In partnership with the Institute for Competitiveness and Sustainable Economy for Puerto Rico (ICSE-PR), RMI led a collaborative process convening over 40 diverse stakeholders, with the goal of providing a vision and policy and regulatory recommendations for Puerto Rico's future energy system. RMI's Islands Energy Program currently supports more than a dozen island nations to plan, develop, and install the renewable energy systems that will prepare them for the future.

Who’s Joining us to Make a Difference

Our bold partners and supporters span government entities, innovators in the electricity sector driving improved system resilience, and municipalities, automakers, technology providers, and new market entrants who are reducing our oil dependence. For example, we are working with the cities of Austin, Texas and Denver, Colorado to pilot Mobility-as-a-Service solutions that cut millions of barrels of oil use from personal cars.

Austin’s collaboration with RMI isn’t just helping us develop innovative mobility solutions. RMI is helping us innovate the way our city imagines the possibilities in the first place, which is absolutely critical as we move from an unworkable status quo toward a future that no American city has yet reached

‐Steve Adler, Mayor of Austin, Texas

Stories from the Field

Resilience in the Wake of Superstorm Sandy

Michael Wu, special assistant, Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Installations, Environment, and Energy, explains why his team at e-Lab Accelerator is investigating clean energy approaches to resilience.

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Bringing Secure Power to Sub-Saharan Communities

RMI associate Kelly Carlin describes his recent trip to Sierra Leone working with local leaders to test the region's first minigrid, providing reliable access to clean, renewable power for the first time.

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Rebuilding America in the "New Normal" of Resilience

RMI's Radhika Lalit discusses how in the wake of a devastating hurricane season, America's cities can place resilience goals at the core of their rebuilding efforts with innovative and cost-effective policies and financing mechanisms.

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Live from e-Lab Accelerator: The Path to Energy Resilience

Resilience—in its many forms and descriptions—was a core motivator for diverse teams to take on innovative and complex projects. It’s why many of them sought the help of e-Lab Accelerator.

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