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Given the increasing frequency, duration, and consequences of power disruptions, whether natural or manmade, the Department of Defense (DoD) has committed to strengthening energy security and resilience. Resilient energy project development must be accelerated and scaled to meet DoD policy requirements and respond to the evolving threat environment. Converge Strategies, LLC and the Idaho National Laboratory, together the “MERC Team,” executed the Military Energy Resilience Catalyst (MERC) program, a technology transition accelerator for energy resilience projects that includes an enduring online community of DoD energy resilience practitioners. MERC’s objective was to improve DoD project development by identifying and disseminating standardized, widely deployable practices.
The MERC Team deployed a set of three distinct and complementary efforts to better establish, replicate, and scale resilient energy project development across DoD. These efforts included:
The MERC program was evaluated against seven key performance objectives. MERC has resulted in a more connected, active, informed, and effective DoD resilience community. Notable outcomes of the program include:
Costs of the MERC program were divided into the following elements: labor, travel/other direct costs (ODCs), workshop labor, and workshop travel/ODCs. The bulk of costs were in labor – conducting resilience workshops, recruiting, and supporting the MERC Network, and organizing the associated programming for Network events, regular meetings, and technical support.
The two largest issues faced during implementation were: