Current:Home > reviewsClimate solution: In the swelter of hurricane blackouts, some churches stay cool on clean power -TradeGrid
Climate solution: In the swelter of hurricane blackouts, some churches stay cool on clean power
View
Date:2025-04-12 21:33:20
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — As Hurricane Helene approaches the U.S. Gulf Coast, coming on the heels of another major storm two weeks ago, blackouts are all but certain in some areas. That carries extra risk for some people.
In New Orleans, Verna Lee and her husband Ronald Bailey, both 71, worry each time the lights go out, how long the batteries will last on the breathing machine Bailey relies on to keep his airways open at night. There is always that stressful decision to stay or to leave, with all the upheaval evacuation entails.
“Ron’s always a little more willing to stay but it’s like, he can’t,” Lee said. Two weeks ago when the lights went out during Hurricane Francine, “He was thinking he would just try to sleep sitting up,” she said. “When he lays down, he has to have that machine on to sleep because his breathing stops otherwise.”
FILE - Two vehicle on Olive Street are flooded during Hurricane Francine in New Orleans, Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2024. (David Grunfeld/The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate via AP)
FILE - Cameron Henry looks at the water build up from Hurricane Francine in front of the levee protection, background, along Lakeshore Drive along Lake Ponchartrain in New Orleans, Sept. 11, 2024. (AP Photo/Matthew Hinton, File)
Francine’s wind and rain lashed the dark neighborhoods, flooding them as Lee and Bailey almost decided to slog through hours of traffic to evacuate and stay with relatives in Texas.
Then they remembered their neighborhood church still had its lights on. Inside First Grace United Methodist Church they found an air-conditioned refuge, a place to plug in their devices. They were able to charge the breathing machine and go back to sleep in their own home.
Pastor Shawn Moses Anglim poses for a photo in front of the First Grace United Methodist Church with solar panels that is part of the Community Lighthouse initiative that uses microgrids, a small-scale power system that can operate and provide electricity amid hurricanes, in New Orleans, Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Matthew Hinton)
First Grace is part of the Community Lighthouse Project, an initiative born of hurricanes, to provide essentials like functioning electrical outlets and air conditioning to people facing blackouts, by building out solar panels on church roofs. The nonprofit Together New Orleans founded the project to turn the buildings into microgrids, meaning they generate and store their own electricity when the grid is down. There are now nine operating in New Orleans with a plan to expand to 86 across the city and 500 across the state.
The buildings keep operating through blackouts because they’ve installed batteries that charge up from the sun. Even if the batteries get drawn down, they recharge when the sun comes out.
Such self-sustaining microgrids have great potential for many places in the world that are slammed by increasingly intense hurricanes and typhoons.
One of the Community Lighthouse Project’s founding members, Broderick Bagert, was motivated by his own searing experience.
Pastor Shawn Moses Anglim, center right, leads a Learning to be Elders class at First Grace United Methodist Church in New Orleans, Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Matthew Hinton)
Pastor Shawn Moses Anglim leads Learning to be Elders class at First Grace United Methodist Church in New Orleans, Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Matthew Hinton)
His baby Isaiah was born with jaundice Aug. 21, 2012, just a few days before Hurricane Isaac hit. Doctors said the baby needed to be admitted to the hospital, but the storm was brewing in the Gulf. So they sent Bagert home with a light bed — a tiny container that exposes babies to blue light.
Then the power went out.
“I remember scurrying through the neighborhood, with a light bed under one arm and an eight-day-old child on the other,” Bagert said. He knew his sister had a generator and he made it to her house.
Isaiah made it through his jaundice.
But Bagert was left with frustration and outrage that communities like his on the frontlines of climate change have no safe spaces to go during a storm. Hurricane Ida came in 2021, 10 years after Isaac. Isaac had come seven years after Katrina. “It was like it just sunk in … they’re never going to do it,” he said about government officials building enough emergency shelters.
A sign for the Community Lighthouse initiative is displayed at First Grace United Methodist Church that uses microgrids, a small-scale power system that can operate and provide electricity amid hurricanes, in New Orleans, Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Matthew Hinton)
In the network of Community Lighthouses, First Grace has symbolic significance.
It was formed after Hurricane Katrina wrecked two churches in 2005 – one historically white and one historically Black. They merged because members felt they could do more for the community together. These days, the congregation includes immaculately dressed elders and tattooed hipsters in shorts, all rising to sway to the gospel choir on Sundays.
There are reminders of what came before: Images of the old Black church’s stained-glass windows are painted on the inner halls of First Grace, and across the street lies the stump of an old Confederate monument that the congregation advocated to remove.
Pastor Shawn Moses Anglim also helped found the network and remembers his heart sinking when he saw how the terracotta roof on First Grace’s sanctuary had been ripped off by Hurricane Ida. It made him passionate about providing a safe shelter during and after storms.
“We had no power for two weeks and it was hot,” said Anglim. “It’s like having an extra ten pounds of wet clothing and walking around in 90 degree weather. We’ve got to rethink this,” he remembers deciding.
Pastor Shawn Moses Anglim poses for a photo near Tesla batteries at First Grace United Methodist Church that is part of the Community Lighthouse initiative that uses microgrids, a small-scale power system that can operate and provide electricity amid hurricanes, in New Orleans, Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Matthew Hinton)
Fast forward and two weeks ago, when Francine knocked out power, the church’s Tesla batteries kicked in, charged up by the solar panels on the roof. Text alerts notified the surrounding neighborhood and more than 100 people to show up.
Kids ran around with toy trucks and hula hoops. Parents caught a break and ate plates of jambalaya. Diego James, 14, plugged in his phone, played the church piano and helped distribute snacks. People could plug in dialysis machines. Others who didn’t know each other chatted around the outlets.
“It gave that real sense of community that is so vital in life, especially in a crisis,” Anglim said. “People care about each other.”
Equipped with solar panels and Tesla batteries, First Grace United Methodist Church, visible background left, is part of the Community Lighthouse initiative that uses microgrids, a small-scale power system that can operate and provide electricity amid hurricanes, in New Orleans, Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Matthew Hinton)
The state’s largest solar-plus-battery microgrid, New Wine Christian Fellowship, is in LaPlace, about a half hour drive west of New Orleans. New Wine is in St. John the Baptist Parish — the U.S. county ranked most vulnerable to climate change by the 2023 Climate Vulnerability Index. Pastor Neil Bernard has seen the impacts of climate change in his community, including homes destroyed by floods and health problems exacerbated by extreme heat. Bernard estimated during Francine, around 20 people came to stay overnight. He has room for 900 cots.
The Community Lighthouse Project has received $8.6 million from several cities in Louisiana, Sandia National Laboratory, and a congressional allocation secured by Congressman Troy Carter. Additional funding is in the pipeline and will bring the total to $13 million.
Arthur Lee is president of Bethlehem Lutheran Church, another microgrid. He said people in New Orleans are having to deal with power outages all the time, and they’re profoundly chaotic, even unsafe.
“When your power goes out, your world is shaken up, your loved ones are upset, you’re upset … everything is dark. But then they come to a safe beacon,” Lee said.
___
O’Malley reported from Philadelphia, Brook from New Orleans.
___
The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- Columbus Blue Jackets await NHL, NHLPA findings on Mike Babcock phone privacy issue
- Outrage boils in Seattle and in India over death of a student and an officer’s callous remarks
- Libya probes the collapse of two dams after flooding devastated an eastern city, killing over 11,000
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Moose tramples hiker along Colorado trail, officials remind hikers to keep safe distance
- Jury finds officer not liable in civil trial over shooting death
- Us or change: World Cup champions give ultimatum to Spain's soccer federation
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- The teen mental health crisis is now urgent: Dr. Lisa Damour on 5 Things podcast
Ranking
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Hugh Jackman and wife Deborra-lee separate after 27 years of marriage
- Ovidio Guzman Lopez, son of El Chapo, brought to US: Sources
- Alaska lawmaker’s husband was flying meat from hunting camp when crash occurred, authorities say
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- US military orders new interviews on the deadly 2021 Afghan airport attack as criticism persists
- Rep. Adam Smith calls GOP's Biden impeachment inquiry a ridiculous step - The Takeout
- Georgia religious group abused, starved woman to death, authorities say
Recommendation
US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
Kansas cancels its fall turkey hunting season amid declining populations in pockets of the US
'Dr. Google' meets its match in Dr. ChatGPT
Jets' Aaron Rodgers Shares Update After Undergoing Surgery for Torn Achilles
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
Letter showing Pope Pius XII had detailed information from German Jesuit about Nazi crimes revealed
A New Mexico man was fatally shot by police at the wrong house. Now, his family is suing
In San Francisco, Kenya’s president woos American tech companies despite increasing taxes at home