Hurricane exposed coastal states require resilient standby power on public and critical facilities, and an electrical subcontractor that cannot watch the region misses fitting generator and standby power bids.

What coastal standby power work sets

Generator and standby power packages across the Gulf and Atlantic coasts, posted on state and local portals and through general contractors, reference NFPA 110 and the windborne debris and elevation requirements of coastal codes. The package sets the system class, the generator and fuel, the protection, and the testing the electrical sub must provide.

Why this scope is easy to misprice

The NFPA 110 class, the fuel and runtime, the windborne debris protection, and the testing sit in the specifications and the coastal code provisions, not the title. A sub that misreads the class or the protection carries the wrong cost into the bid.

How an AI bid agent reads coastal standby power

An AI bid agent monitors the coastal state portals, reads each standby power package, and surfaces the NFPA 110 class, the equipment, the protection, and the testing. The electrical sub sees every fitting bid.

You can see how the agent reads a coastal standby power package in our AI bid agent demo for MEP subcontractors. It monitors the regional portals and pulls the NFPA 110 class, generator scope, and protection.