An electric vehicle owner has used her car’s emergency power system to run her 11-year-old son’s lifesaving dialysis machine and another has ridden to the rescue of his neighbours after devastating storms cut power in south-east Queensland.

When the power went down following storms and flash flooding on Christmas Day, many residents immediately felt the consequences: electric gates did not work, septic tanks began to fill, air conditioners could not run and fridges began to warm as a heatwave followed.

But some electric vehicle drivers whose cars are equipped with “vehicle to load” systems – a back-up power system that allows the car to act as an emergency generator or supply for devices such as lights, laptops, TVs and refrigerators – stepped in to help out and, in some cases, save lives.

    • @Twentytwodividedby7
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      810 months ago

      It’s in the first paragraph…Jesus, you’re lazy…the power was out due to storm damage. That has nothing to do with where they live

    • DessertStorms
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      510 months ago

      The implication of your comment being what - that people who live in places with an unstable grid, and who can’t move (the Venn diagram there would be pretty much a circle), deserve what they get? Should fuck off and die?

      Seriously, the privilege you must have and the sheltered life you must live to have come up with that for a reply is astounding…

    • @AA5B
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      110 months ago

      No power grid is perfectly stable