RESILIENCE Power-Outage Exercises Strengthen the Resilience of U.S. Bases

By Kylie Foy

Published 23 September 2025

In recent years, power outages caused by extreme weather or substation attacks have exposed the vulnerability of the electric grid. Now mandated by law, Lincoln Laboratory’s blackout drills are improving national security and ensuring mission readiness.

In recent years, power outages caused by extreme weather or substation attacks have exposed the vulnerability of the electric grid. For the nation’s military bases, which are served by the grid, being ready for outages is a matter of national security. What better way to test readiness than to cut the power?

Lincoln Laboratory is doing just that with its Energy Resilience Readiness Exercises (ERREs). During an exercise, a base is disconnected from the grid, testing the ability of backup power systems and service members to work through failure. Lasting up to 15 hours, each exercise mimics a real outage event with limited forewarning to the base population.

“No one thought that this kind of real-world test would be accepted. We’ve now done it at 33 installations, impacting over 800,000 people,” says Jean Sack ’13, SM ’15, who leads the program with Christopher Lashway and Annie Weathers in the laboratory’s Energy Systems Group.

According to a Department of Energy report, 70 percent of the nation’s transmission lines are approaching end of life. This aging infrastructure, combined with increasing power demands and interdependencies, threatens cascading failures. In response, the Department of Defense (DoD) has sharpened its focus on energy resilience, or the ability to anticipate, withstand, and recover from outages. On a base, an outage could disrupt critical missions, open the door to physical or cyberattacks, and cut off water supplies.

“Threats to this already-fragile system are increasing. That’s why this work is so important,” Sack says. 

Safely Cutting Power
Before an exercise, the laboratory team works closely with base leadership and infrastructure personnel to carefully plan how it will safely disconnect from utility power. Over multiple site visits, they study each building and mission to understand power capabilities, ensure health and safety, and develop contingency plans.

“We get people together who may never have spoken before, but depend on one another. We like to say ‘connecting mission owners to their utility providers,’” says Lashway, a former electrician turned energy-systems researcher. “The planning process is a huge learning opportunity, and a chance to fix issues ahead of the outage.”

On the day of the outage, laboratory staff are on site to ensure the process runs smoothly, but the base is meant to run the exercise. Since beginning in 2018, the ERRE campaign has reached huge installations, including Fort Bragg, a U.S. Army base in North Carolina that sees nearly 150,000 people daily, and sites as far away as England and Japan.