Microgrid boot camp prepares students for utility internships

May 14, 2019

University Relations

ACEP's Jeremy Vandermeer leads a live demonstration of solar and wind energy integrating with the diesel generator in the Power Systems Integration Lab. Photo by Amanda Byrd.
ACEP's Jeremy Vandermeer leads a live demonstration of solar and wind energy integrating with the diesel generator in the Power Systems Integration Lab. Photo by Amanda Byrd.


Engineering students are attending a microgrid boot camp this week on the Fairbanks campus. This pilot boot camp is a collaboration between UAF's Alaska Center for Energy and Power and the Laboratory for Energy And Power Solutions at Arizona State University.

The course was originally developed as part of the Naval Enterprise Partnership Teaming with Universities for National Excellence program, an energy research project funded by the U.S. Department of Defense to break new ground in alternative energy for the employment of student veterans.

The course is an intensive one-week training focused on technical, economic and regulatory basics of microgrids, with a focus on Alaska energy challenges. The audience for this year’s camp is University of Alaska undergraduate engineering students who have been selected for a summer internship at an Alaska utility for the summer.

The boot camp prepares students for summer project work with urban and remote utilities, all of which have started the process of integrating renewable and alternative energy sources into their grids. This pilot program is testing out the boot camp concept for Alaska, and first steps have been taken to extend the reach to utility members, city and tribal councils, housing authorities, trade schools and programs, and industry.

For more information on the ACEP microgrid boot camp, please email Heike Merkel.