Prime Power: Filling the Army's Electric Power Gap

Abstract

The Army cannot be sure whether it has enough prime power generators to provide electricity during wartime. It has reason to believe it may not. The uncertainty - the possible deficiency - should not be tolerated. Prime power is essential. The alternatives will not suffice. Commercial utilities are not available everywhere and are too vulnerable in wartime. Tactical generators consume too much fuel, demand too much maintenance, and wear out too fast general usage. The barrier to overcoming the problem is the Army's inability to produce a sound estimate of the requirement. The current estimating method is based on an outdated and incomplete mission statement for prime power generators and employs a single, outdated, kilowatt-per-person planning factor. The mission should be restated to include: Overseas, provide reliable, mobile, and resource- efficient power to groups of Army units and essential installations behind the front combat zone; In the United States, support large, rapid population increases in Army installations during mobilization; and In the United States, provide emergency power to Army and other critical installations when commercial power distribution is disrupted. The requirements calculation should, to be more reflective of real-world forces, be based on scenario-specific simulation of peak-time power consumption by selected Army units and installations. These changes should be implemented by the Army's Engineering and Housing Support Center. Only then will the Army be in a position to rectify any prime power deficiencies.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 1989
Accession Number
ADA221308

Entities

People

  • Carl F. Stout
  • Doug M. Brown
  • Jeff Hawkins
  • Robert W. Salthouse

Organizations

  • LMI

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Air Conditioning
  • Electric Generators
  • Electric Power
  • Electric Power Plants
  • Electrical Equipment
  • Electrical Loads
  • Electricity
  • Engineering
  • Generators
  • Load Monitoring
  • Logistics
  • Maintenance
  • Power Distribution
  • Security
  • Simulations
  • Supply Depots
  • United States

Readers

  • Computational Modeling and Simulation
  • Logistics and Supply Chain Management.
  • Maritime Combat Support and Expeditionary Logistics.