St. Petersburg sits on a low, flat peninsula between Tampa Bay and the Gulf — beautiful, and dangerously
exposed. In September 2024 Hurricane Helene pushed a
record surge across the barrier islands and into Shore Acres, the Old Northeast waterfront, Gulfport, and
St. Pete Beach, dropping feet of saltwater and knocking out thousands of Duke customers.
Two weeks later Hurricane Milton came through with
damaging wind and a fresh round of outages. The city's wires belong to
Duke Energy Florida — not TECO — and between hurricanes
and one of the most lightning-heavy skies in the country, circuits go down here well outside storm season.
For a home on a well pump, a medical device, or just a refrigerator and a family trying to sleep through
the heat, a multi-day outage isn't an inconvenience — it's an emergency. A permanently installed standby
generator senses the outage and restores power automatically, usually within seconds, and runs until Duke
brings the grid back.
See how installation works →