Keep it cool when it comes to summer power outages
According to the Department of Energy data, a recent analysis found that weather-related power outages are up by 67 percent since 2000. Climate change and aging infrastructure are putting a heavy burden on the country’s power grid, and the communities they serve.
As temperatures rise this summer, so will the consumption of electricity. This may cause some power grids to experience blackouts, an unexpected loss of power lasting minutes, hours or days.
Electricity providers will either ask customers to voluntarily conserve energy at home or they will schedule a reduced flow of electricity – a brownout – to certain areas of the grid to prevent a complete blackout.
If the home experiences a temporary power outage, the following are some key reminders to keep food out of the Danger Zone:
• Monitor temperatures by keeping an appliance thermometer in both the refrigerator and freezer. Make sure the refrigerator temperature is at 40º F or below, and the freezer is at 0º F or below.
• A refrigerator will keep food safe for up to four hours during a power outage. After four hours without power, discard refrigerated perishable food. Meat, poultry, fish, eggs and leftovers must be thrown out.
• When in doubt, throw it out. Never taste food to determine its safety. Evaluate each item separately.
• Food keeps longer in a freezer. If the doors stay closed, food will stay safe for up to 48 hours in a full freezer and 24 hours in a half-full freezer.
• Transfer food to a cooler and fill with ice or frozen gel packs. Make sure there is enough ice to keep food in the cooler at 40º F or below. Add more ice to the cooler as it begins to melt.
• Obtain dry ice or block ice if power is going to be out for a prolonged period – 50 pounds of dry ice should hold an 18-cubic-foot freezer for two days. (Caution: Do not touch dry ice with bare hands or place it in direct contact with food.) For more questions about food safety, contact the USDA’s Meat and Poultry Hotline at 1-888-674-6854.