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Defense Officials Say Installation Resiliency Is High Priority

Infrastructure on many installations has climate, energy and resiliency issues that could impact the continuity of operations and quality of life for service members and their families if not addressed, said Rachel P. Ross, deputy chief sustainability officer and acting principal deputy assistant secretary of defense for energy, installations and environment.
 

A person speaks into a microphone as two other people listen. All three are sitting on a stage.
Google Defense Forum
Deborah Loomis, senior climate change advisor to the Navy secretary, speaks at the Google Defense Forum, Jan. 25, 2024. With her on the panel are, from left: moderator Kevin Mulligan, the senior manager of government affairs and public policy at Google Cloud, and Rachel P. Ross, deputy chief sustainability officer and acting principal deputy assistant secretary of defense for energy, installations and environment.
Photo By: David Vergun, DOD
VIRIN: 240125-D-UB488-001Y

The Defense Department has been evaluating structures on installations to determine their age, condition and vulnerability in order to prioritize funding for retrofits, along with updating building codes, Ross said yesterday at the Google Defense Forum. 

Ross said some examples of what the department is doing to become more resilient are:

  • Working with local utilities;
  • Using renewable energy;
  • Installing microgrids to ensure power is available at all times. 

Forum panelist Deborah Loomis, the senior climate change advisor to the Navy secretary, said the Navy is dealing with climate vulnerability in a number of ways. 

Two soldiers stand in a desert environment, silhouetted by the sun.
Sun Silhouette
Soldiers from the 10th Special Forces Group look out over the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, Calif., Aug. 17, 2021. The terrain and environment at the National Training Center closely matches the hot, dry conditions soldiers experience while on some deployments.
Photo By: Army Spc. Steven Alger
VIRIN: 210817-A-AQ836-0658C

The Navy is using modeling and simulation to evaluate infrastructure on its four shipyards with the goal of improving operations, energy and sustainability, she said. Loomis noted that Naval Station Norfolk, Virginia, loses power about 100 times a year. 

Loomis also said the Navy also has done an exercise to evaluate the impacts of climate change on its installations—from wildfires, droughts and high temperatures to flooding, sea level rise and storms—and what can be done to reduce them.

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