December 5, 2025–Written by Aaron Studwell for Industrial Info Resources (Sugar Land, Texas)–When the large-scale electrical grid fails after hurricanes, wildfires, or ice-laden winter storms, microgrids can operate on an “island,” generating and managing local power until bulk transmission is restored.
That combination of local generation, intelligent controls and storage is what makes a microgrid more than a backup generator; it’s a miniature power system that can operate both connected to and independent from the main grid, lowering emissions and costs in blue-sky times and supplying critical loads when everything else goes dark.
