Participants of the planned power resiliency exercise listen as LAWA's Director of Emergency Management, Ed Bushman, provides important details in advance of the exercise.
(Los Angeles, CA) On the evening of Tuesday, October 30, Los Angeles World Airports (LAWA), Los Angeles Airport Police Division, the Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD), the Transportation Security Administration, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, concessionaires, airlines, and airport partners gathered on the roof of Parking Structure 2A and at the Department Operations Center (DOC) at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) to participate in a planned early-morning power resiliency exercise.
“As the fifth busiest airport in the world, it is crucial that we are prepared and ready to respond if a catastrophic power failure or emergency situation were to happen," said Keith Wilschetz, Deputy Executive Director of Operations and Emergency Management, LAWA. "Our goal during an emergency is to return to full operations as quickly and safely as possible. These exercises take us from theoretical to actual, allowing us to better understand our systems, capacity, and improve our response plans."
The exercise assessed the strength of backup power systems and generators, as well as the impact that a complete loss of power would have on LAX's Tom Bradley International Terminal (TBIT). With the main power disconnected from the DWP power system, the participants were able to test and track resiliency and functionality of the emergency systems. During the exercise, a real-time test of the backup generators, fire/life/safety systems, emergency communications and recovery protocols was performed.
"The Tom Bradley International Terminal field exercise gave us added confidence that in the event of a loss of our primary power, our backup systems will allow us to remain operationally functional," said John Carver, Deputy Executive Director, Chief Development Office, LAWA. "We found we were able to maintain terminal operations without taxing the full capacity of our back-up generators. The test, of course, also identified areas where we can improve, and to which we can now give added attention."
The goals of the exercise included discovering areas of vulnerability for the airport, mitigating any life safety concerns, monitoring emergency systems and infrastructure, identifying areas of the LAX terminal operations where further work was warranted, and better preparing personnel and first responders for possible natural disasters or power failures.
A previous power shutdown was held in September in Terminals 1, 2 and 3. During that exercise, LAX officials determined emergency lighting was inadequate in certain locations and circuit boards in two elevators were burned out by the power surge when the grid turned back on. Since that time, workers have taken the necessary steps to correct those issues.
(Left to right) LAWA Executives Keith Wilschetz and Michael Christensen discuss the situation and plan of action with staffer inside the terminal.
LAWA staff members discuss the shutdown exercise at Tom Bradley International Terminal.
(High-resolution photos of the power shutdown exercise available upon request.)
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