How to Make a Blackout Kit

Cities of steel and concrete are testaments to mankind’s ingenuity. We take a lot for granted today, including the internet, our motor vehicles, indoor plumbing and sewage, running water and more.

These are far more than niceties; these public utilities and advanced technologies are what make modern life so luxurious and indeed possible. What you have probably taken for granted even more than that is the one utility that makes them all possible- electricity.

blackout kit

Without electricity all these modern marvels grind to a halt. No more fresh water. No more sewer service. Definitely no more internet, and no more light that comes on at the flick of a switch.

All of those and a host of other lesser technologies will be rendered useless, almost instantly, if we lose power. I hate to break it to you, but the United States’ power grid is a shambling mess: aged, outdated, and ill kept. The electrical infrastructure that keeps all of this running is an incredibly fragile thing.

You might have noticed in the past few years that blackouts are becoming increasingly common. The United States’ power grid for the average citizen goes down more often and stays offline longer than nearly any other civilized nation on Earth.

What’s worse, our power grid is significantly more vulnerable to direct attack or natural disasters. In short, a regional blackout is nothing shy of a major disaster and can be a serious problem for your survival and continued societal integrity.

Any prepper worth the name should be prepared for a major blackout. In today’s article, we’ll tell you how to get prepared for just that.

Why Should I Be So Worried About Blackouts?

Plainly stated, because pretty much the entirety of modern life is entirely dependent upon electricity.

The entirety of our communications networks is comprised of:

  • landlines and modern cellular systems
  • air traffic control systems
  • computerized monitoring and control networks
  • city water systems
  • sewage treatment systems
  • refrigeration
  • banking
  • chemical treatment
  • manufacturing

… and the list goes on and on.

Everything that makes modern life recognizably modern, to say nothing of functional, is 100% thanks to electricity.

The only question is how long things can go without electricity before they start to get really dicey. Almost everyone has been through a power outage lasting anywhere from a few minutes to several hours, maybe even half a day.

While highly inconvenient, and perhaps forcing you to throw out the food in your fridge, these short losses of power don’t really stack up to a proper blackout, which can affect entire cities, or even entire regions.

Those are the ones you have to watch out for, and those are the ones that, if they last, will prove to be a severe test of your survival abilities.

Think about this: a single blackout lasting days or weeks will result in a loss of nearly all refrigerated food, a severe strain on life-support technologies in hospitals that are dependent on electricity, the loss of or adverse reaction of chemicals that must be stored under controlled temperatures, and a severe impairment of the entire transportation grid.

Generators will only go so far into sustaining the most of vital of these processes. The rest of them, well, tough.

It of course goes without saying that people who are dependent upon electricity for heating and cooling in harsh climates will now face a very real risk of exposure, even inside their own homes.

The very young and the very old will, as always, suffer the worst. In hotter climates loss of air conditioning has been a historic contributing factor to mass civil unrest and rioting. I’ll give you some examples just down below.

Lastly, a cascading power failure along with attempts to restart or stabilize the system can cause electrical fluctuations that may yet be very damaging to delicate components of the power grid and every kind of electronic system connected to it.

What this means is that a cure may in the end be worse than the disease; essential computers and other controllers might be destroyed when the power grid comes back online after a massive blackout. The effects of that occurrence are far-reaching.

Major U.S. Blackouts of the 20th and 21st Centuries

All major developed nations have suffered blackouts. The United States has suffered more than most, including some real doozies in the 20th and 21st centuries. Below you’ll find a sampling of some of the largest and the worst along with their effects.

Consider also how much worse any of the below could have been if they lasted several weeks, several months or even longer. It can happen, and more than that it is only a matter of time before it does.

New England-Canada Blackout, 2003

Affected Citizens: 55 Million+. Duration: Varied, one to two weeks for most. The most widespread blackout to ever affect North America knocked out an entire half of New England and a massive swath of Canada.

This gargantuan screw-up was caused by a controller system software error that resulted in the silencing of an alarm typically relied on by technicians to notify them of problems with the power lines themselves.

Always make sure your phones and computers are updated, folks; this little glitch caused the second largest blackout in the history of the world, and knocked over 100 power plants out of commission.

The greater effects resulting from this monster blackout included the loss of all utilities in major cities including sewage control, stopping of trains and planes, and the contamination of water supplies.

Pacific Blackout, 1982

Affected citizens: 5 million+. Duration: 4 days. This humongous blackout knocked out power to the majority of California and even all the way as far down as Las Vegas, Nevada.

This one resulted from a literal case of disaster dominoes: gale force winds knocked over one transmission tower into its neighbor, which hilariously resulted in a series of towers failing. This power failure itself prevented the energy company that owned the towers from issuing vital orders to response teams and repair workers.

The result? A sluggish disaster response that left the majority of California and Nevada without power for four days. The blackout originated in Tracy, California but had the greater effect of disrupting entirely electricity as far away as Las Vegas.

Stop and ponder just how intricately interconnected our power grid is, and you may be thankful it wasn’t worse.

The Big Apple Blackout, 1977

Affected Citizens: Millions in and around NYC. Duration: 24 Hours +/-. This Metropolis-scale blackout was caused by lightning strikes, pure and simple.

Most of us have lost power during a bad thunderstorm before, but chances are it wasn’t for this long and also didn’t have the rotten luck to occur during one of the nation’s and city’s worst periods of economic shrinkage.

And it also occurred during a brutally hot summer in the middle of July… and, as it turns out, New York City was also caught in the iron grip of Fear due to the ongoing Son of Sam murders.

Almost simultaneously with the power going out, looters and rioters took to the streets, smashing the windows of thousands of businesses and setting thousands of fires to go along with it.

This stretched emergency responders to the breaking point, and resulted in a staggering $1.3 billion dollars in damage. This blackout more than any other illustrates how quickly society can fray at the seams without electricity.

Top 10 WORST 20th Century POWER OUTAGES

Getting Your Blackout Survival Kit Ready

Getting ready for any blackout, big or small, you’ll need to gather some supplies you’ll need to survive as with any major disaster, along with inventorying essential provisions, medications and other resources that are absolutely dependent on electricity for viability.

This does not necessarily mean keeping the Wi-Fi going so you can stream your favorite show in the comfort of your darkened home: I’m talking about things like medication that must be refrigerated, certain food supplies, and any critical life support equipment for persistent diseases and ailments.

If you don’t require anything like that, so much the better: you’ll have a much easier time of surviving a blackout. If you do, however, you’ll need to take steps to maintain continuity of power in the event that our power grid fails running like the time.

This could take the form of a deep cycle battery bank, a generator, or alternate power generation supplies, be they solar or thermoelectric. More on that in just a minute.

blackout supplies and Tupperware container

The Basic Blackout Survival Kit

All the items, equipment and Provisions in this section are based off the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) published guidelines and recommendations for citizens along with a few enhanced lighting recommendations from the author.

If you are already a seasoned prepper, you’ll recognize most of this stuff, and probably have it already. For those of you who don’t, take note: the core survival kit (or shopping list, if you want to think that way) for most major disasters looks very much the same.

batteries flashlights glow sticks
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Equipment

  • Clothing – Typical daily wear clothing according to weather and season, along with extra protective equipment like sturdy gloves and boots.
  • Shelter – Especially vital in cold climes. You will want plenty of blankets and sleeping bags along with a good tent, or the stuff to make a passable tent (even within your own home) so you can create a microclimate shelter inside if needed.
  • Lighting – You definitely don’t want to be left to stumble and toil in the dark during a prolonged blackout, so you’ll need plenty of off-grid lighting solutions.
    • Flashlights – Your most used utility light. Handy for chores and self-defense. Acquire flashlights which strike a balance between brightness, long runtime and additional features like SOS strobe, low-light color LEDs and more.
    • Headlamps – Headlamps afford you most of the advantages of flashlights, but allow you to employ them hands-free, and are ideal for work details.
    • Lanterns – For all around area lighting that is still portable, it is hard to beat a lantern. I heartily recommend you stick with battery powered or rechargeable lanterns to keep the fire risk down; oil- or alcohol-fueled models can burn a house down quickly after an accident.
    • Chemlights – AKA glowsticks. These lights are not just cheap novelty items for parties and Halloween. Good chemlights can provide completely safe, soft lighting suitable for marking, signaling and close-range work. Best of all they stay lit for hours and don’t gobble any precious batteries.
    • Batteries – With the exception of the chemlights, all of the above personal lighting tools will need batteries to operate. Make sure you have a big supply on hand and keep them rotated according to their projected shelf lives. You can ease your logistical burden if you make sure your lights all use one or two kinds of battery, max.
  • Tarps – Used as a ground cover, to block light from windows and for improvised shelter making.
  • Cell Phone – Save this for emergencies, not games. You might get lucky and be able to access cell towers that have backup power supplies. Make sure this includes a spare battery and charger.
  • Emergency Radio – An NOAA emergency radio will hopefully let you hear from authorities who will doubtlessly be working furiously to correct the current troubles. Battery powered is acceptable, but the dynamo-powered crankable models are better for longevity.
  • Solar Power Charger – You will have plenty of electronics that are still useful during a blackout if only you can find a way to power them. Additionally, modern electronics and devices have a strong preference for efficient rechargeable batteries instead of disposables, so having a completely off-grid way to fuel them makes sense. Everything from flashlights and lanterns to satellite phones and even fans can be recharged in a reasonable time using the latest in solar charger kits.
flashlights and lanterns in waterproof container
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Food

  • Food – Adults need around 2,000 calories a day. You can get by with around 1,700 if you are not moving or working much. Stick with options that are canned or in pouches, shelf stable and require minimal preparation. Remember fuel will likely be at a premium. Also don’t forget to include disposable plates, utensils and a can opener!
  • Water – In mild areas count on using one gallon per person per day. That includes drinking and rudimentary sanitation. You’ll need more in a hot climate.

Hygiene Items

  • Include all the typical items you need in the bathroom day-to-day: deodorants, soaps, toothbrush and toothpaste, shaving kit if desired, feminine hygiene items and baby wipes.

Medical Kit

  • Basic First Aid – Smaller injuries like nicks, cuts, scrapes, rash, bug bites, sunburn, blisters, etc. Also include medicines for common ailments.
  • Trauma Kit – For major injuries and wounds. You will need training to make use of this component, and should be able to treat sprains, fractures. Penetrating and lacerating injuries, head trauma, major burns, blood loss, etc.
  • Any Prescription Meds – Any and all prescription meds or eyewear, at least a one week supply. Consult your physician about long term storage since you cannot count on getting these in an emergency.

Additional

  • ToolkitA basic toolkit that will help you fortify or repair your home or help someone else do the same. Think hammers, saws, nails, screws, drivers, pry bars, etc.
  • Document Pouch – Hard copies of all vital docs like ID’s, mortgages, deeds, birth certificates, social security numbers, etc.
  • Cash – It is the only currency you’ll be able to count on for the duration of the blackout.
  • Entertainment – If things don’t get too crazy you could still be in for a long wait until things get back to normal. Have on hand some playing cards, a few board games and books to help stave off boredom.
10 Pre-Blackout Tips

What about Supplemental Power Systems?

Should you care to invest in something like a diesel or gas generator, you can enjoy all the accoutrements of modern life in your home that other people, those who lack generators anyway, will be going without during the blackout.

Be advised this will do nothing to ensure the water coming out of the taps is safe to drink if it comes out at all, or the sewage system will be functioning normally. You will be able to rely on though your computers and home appliances like the refrigerator and alarm system continuing to work.

Another option is a deep cycle battery bank, one that is charged off of normal power supply coming into the house that will activate manually or automatically after grid power is lost.

Lacking a generator or any other way to recharge it will only provide power for a limited time.

This, of course, begs the question whether or not you should invest in something like the now-ubiquitous solar power panels that can potentially provide your entire house with power, or even something like a windmill.

Be advised that all of these systems require a significant investment to make them operational, as well as ongoing maintenance to ensure they function when the time comes.

What you should also consider is the fact that being the one house that is lit up while, literally, an entire city is in the dark will raise eyebrows and may make you a potential target among undesirables: all of the above systems are perennial targets for thieves even when the lights are on.

Security Considerations

As you learned in the example blackouts above, looting, rioting and arson seem to regularly accompany major blackouts. You must be prepared to provide for your physical security during a blackout that lasts more than a few hours.

The worst parts of humanity will come scurrying out of the storm drains to raise Hell, loot and set fires. Getting a gun and learning how to use it is the most obvious answer to help ensure a positive outcome for you and yours.

If guns are simply not an option for you, consider getting a large “riot” canister of pepper spray. Larger units afford greater range, better coverage and enough capacity to deal with multiple attackers over multiple instances.

Conclusion

Small-scale blackouts are pretty common and nothing to get too excited about. Major blackouts are serious disasters, and may lead to significant threats to your health and security.

You can be prepared for a blackout by amassing the right supplies in the right quantities, and having a plan for dealing with the after-effects. With a little luck, the lights will be back on in no time. But if they aren’t, you’ll be ready.

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6 thoughts on “How to Make a Blackout Kit”

  1. Great article! A relative lives in a hurricane prone area and taught us to turn a personal headlamp towards a gallon jug of water for emergency lighting for an entire room or tent in an emergency. It works so well that we us it regularly for camping now! Camping is great practice for blackouts as it is predictable, in primitive conditions and allows experimentation with equipment and techniques at your leisure under low stress situations. We keep our equipment contained in 2 tubs in an easily accessible location and almost all of it is powered by re-chargeable batteries that are powered by solar re-chargers. The 1983 blackout cited in the article started in northeast Ohio at the height of a heatwave and cascaded through several integrated powergrid systems located in New England. Normally, these systems depend on drawing power from midwestern grids when their systems are overtaxed but that time, Cleveland started the cascade due to huge sales of window air-conditioning units earlier that same Spring drawing a huge increase in electricity. The result was disaster. Almost 20 years later, cyber-terrorism and foreign cyber-sabotage are even greater threats than airconditioners, overloaded power grids and even EMPs. More importantly, cyber threats to power grids are directed, surgical in application and statististically more probable than any other possibility, including hurricanes. So, practice your blackout preps every time you go camping. Might as well have fun while you practice!

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  2. This was a pretty good article, but you could have done without the fear mongering nonsense. To say the US power grid is worse off than other civilized countries is just plain ignorant on your part. Large scale power outages don’t happen often, and we have a very safe and reliable power grid here in the US. Yes, there are vulnerabilities and prepping for a massive blackout is a great idea. But it isn’t as fragile as you make it sound. Here in the US our power grid is redundant. But you also have to remember that the US is massive, with varying geography. You’re going to have problems at times. No country is immune. Keep the articles factual and leave the fear mongering out. We get enough of that BS from the fake news media

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  3. The major problem isnt the equipment itself but the software that controls it. No manual backup controls were designed to temporarily replace the automatic ones. if catastrophic failures occur we have few replacement parts. every transformer is unique, designed for that location with no future expansion program in place. We do not make transformers in this country. to get a replacement takes up to two years. We must standardize all substations. Then when one fails we have backups at the ready. if too many go out they can be “borrowed from non critical areas. Temp. power could be supplied on a small scale for hospitals with the diesel electric locomotives that could be attached to specially adapted sub-stations that supply hospitals the locomotive could be driven up to a substation on a spur installed for that purpose and tanker trucks deliver fuel. first get linemen to disconnect the grid in a pattern that cuts out all heavy manufacturing. as power is available, it is routed to the residential areas first. This way loads can be monitored manually. as more generation is available and synchronized it can be used to supply more areas. when an area is stable it can be again taken over by automatic systems.————– I, Grampa

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  4. Here in Mobile we were without power for 4 weeks during Hurricane Fredrick. Some were out for 5 weeks. Like so many that have been through hurricanes. Many lost water, sewage, natural gas, although we did not lose those. We were on a boil water alert though. Telephone poles snap off in hurricanes plus trees fall and snap power lines. It can take months sometimes to repair all the damage. Think about it. Those in areas that do not lose power may not be prepared at all for anything. You have to live through these things to know that they do happen. That was not the only hurricane that hit here and we lost power.

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