Buffalo and Geneseo Issue Microgrid RFPs for NY Prize Feasibility Studies

July 19, 2015
New York towns and cities are continuing to issue microgrid RFPs for help with feasibility studies being funded through the first NY Prize awards

Buffalo, NY. Source: Wikimedia Commons

New York towns and cities are continuing to issue microgrid RFPs for help with feasibility studies being funded through the first NY Prize awards.

In all, 83 cities and towns were recently awarded $100,000 each for community microgrid feasibility studies in the first phase of the NY Prize, a $40 million contest to encourage community microgrids.

The city of Buffalo is seeking bids by Tuesday, August 4, 2015 for a contractor to assist with an engineering and feasibility study for a downtown microgrid.

Buffalo plans to expand existing district energy loops to include more buildings, among them government facilities, private mixed-use development, industry and residential apartments.

The city has a downtown steam heat system, now running at only about 33 percent of its capacity, which it intends to modernize. It also plans to add a combined heat and plant, possibly fueled by waste or biomass. The microgrid may provide cooling services and include renewable energy.

Buffalo will explore financing through a public/private partnership. To do so, it may revitalize the Buffalo District Energy Corp.

The contract term will run for eight months. Partners in the community microgrid project include the Buffalo Department of Public Works, Erie County, and the Buffalo Urban Development Corp.

More information is available at New York Bids or by contacting the Buffalo Department of Public Works, Jennifer Jacobs, jjacobs@city-buffalo. A copy of the microgrid RFP is available here.

Separately, bids are due July 24, 2015 in a microgrid RFP issued by Geneseo, part of the State University of New York (SUNY). The college is seeking a flex/tech consultant under a five-month contract to determine microgrid options for the Village of Geneseo.

SUNY Geneseo is a critical shelter area for emergencies.  The proposed microgrid would serve Geneseo’s wastewater treatment plant, fire station, police station, a regional urgent care facility, Livingston County’s government center and jail, SUNY Geneseo’s police station, health center, dormitories, and large gymnasium capable of housing displaced community members in the event of a crisis.

Project partners include SUNY Geneseo, the Village of Geneseo, Campus Auxiliary Services, and Rochester Gas and Electric

The Geneseo contact is Rebecca Anchor, Purchasing & Central  Service, 585-245-5100, [email protected]. More details are available at New York Bids.

As reported earlier on MicrogridKnowledge.com, Southampton, New York, issued a solicitation July 2 seeking a contractor to assist with its community microrid feasibility study.

Track microgrid RFPs by following us on twitter @MicrogridNews.

About the Author

Elisa Wood | Editor-in-Chief

Elisa Wood is the editor and founder of EnergyChangemakers.com. She is co-founder and former editor of Microgrid Knowledge.

gettyimages1341067688_sdl__1320x755

Revolutionizing Defense: The Crucial Role of Microgrids and Schneider Electric in Department of Defense Energy Resiliency

Sept. 13, 2024
Last month, the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) said that U.S. power grids are becoming more susceptible to cyberattacks every day, with vulnerable attack...

Mesa_Hospital_Cover REV

Hospitals Need Microgrids, Not Just Backup Generators

Hospitals need a microgrid to ensure they have reliable backup power in a time of crisis. Microgrids can power a hospital for weeks or months at a time.