Jacksonville is the biggest city by land area in the lower 48, wrapped around a river that
flows north. That river is the story. The St. Johns
is wide, tidal, and slow, and when a storm stalls over Northeast Florida the water backs up
into downtown, San Marco, Riverside, and the low creek-side lots instead of draining to the
sea. Power and water often go out together.
The city is served by JEA, one of the
largest municipal, community-owned utilities in the country. JEA also pipes natural gas across
much of Duval, which makes a natural-gas standby generator unusually practical here: a lot of
Jacksonville homes can run one straight off the existing line.
For years Jacksonville assumed the coastline sheltered it. Hurricane Matthew in 2016 and
Hurricane Irma in 2017 proved otherwise, and the sprawl that makes the city feel safe also
makes it slow to restore: crews have a lot of ground and a lot of tree canopy to work
through after a big blow.
A permanently installed standby generator sidesteps all of it. It detects the outage and
restores power on its own, usually within seconds, and runs for as long as the grid is down.
See how installation works →