i. Government & Federal Facilities

Mission-critical installations cannot depend on a grid they do not control.

Government and federal facilities operate under a different standard than commercial buildings. Power interruption is not an inconvenience — it is a mission failure. Aurevia Energy designs and builds complete microgrid systems that give these installations true energy independence, with islanding capability to operate entirely off-grid when the utility cannot be trusted.

Energy resilience is now a national security priority.

Aging grid infrastructure, increasing cyber and physical threat exposure, and growing facility energy loads have converged into a single problem: federal installations can no longer assume that the public grid will deliver power when it is needed most. The Department of Defense, GSA, VA, and federal civilian agencies have all responded with capital programs, executive orders, and procurement vehicles that prioritize energy resilience as core mission infrastructure.

What the buyer wants is not a green-energy initiative dressed up in compliance language. They want operational continuity through a grid event, a cyberattack, or a physical disruption. That requires hardware, controls, and documentation built to a different standard than commercial work.

Procurement Vehicles
IDIQ, MATOC, GSA Schedule, OLDCC grants, DCIP, Installation Resilience programs.
Compliance Requirements
NDAA Section 889, FEOC restrictions, NIST SP 800-171, CMMC self-assessment, domestic content thresholds.
Performance Standards
Islanding-capable operation, formal acceptance testing, bondable delivery, mission-rated uptime.
Counterparties
DoD installations, federal civilian facilities, prime contractors and architect-engineer firms operating under federal contracting authority.
The Aurevia Approach

Engineered for the standard federal work demands.

Federal projects do not tolerate the gaps that show up between a design firm, a construction contractor, and a commissioning agent on commercial work. Aurevia Energy delivers under a single accountable EPC contract, with the documentation discipline that federal acceptance testing requires.

i.
Single-contract EPC accountability
Engineering, procurement, and construction under one accountable contract. No coordination gaps between scopes. The principal who signs the contract is the same one accountable for the system at commissioning.
ii.
Islanding as a primary requirement
Microgrid architecture designed to seamlessly disconnect from the grid and run on stored and on-site generated power. Tested through formal islanding scenarios, not assumed from spec sheets.
iii.
Procurement built for compliance
FEOC-compliant equipment selection from day one. CATL, BYD, and other restricted-source components excluded from the bill of materials. Domestic content thresholds tracked and documented for IRA bonus credit qualification where applicable.
iv.
Documentation to government standard
Submittals, test reports, O&M manuals, and as-built drawings produced to the level federal acceptance requires — not the level commercial work tolerates. CMMC and NIST 800-171 controls applied to all project data.

What a federal microgrid actually includes.

A federal microgrid project is more than a solar array and a battery bank. The deliverables below describe what Aurevia executes under a typical federal EPC scope.

Fit & Differentiators

Why this work, for this firm.

Aurevia is a focused EPC firm built for federal critical-infrastructure work. The factors below describe what makes the fit specific.

i
Compliance From Day One
CMMC Level 2 SSP, MTA-STS, SAM.gov registration, and FEOC procurement protocols are not retrofits. They are how the company was built.
ii
Founder-Led Accountability
The principal on the proposal is the same principal at commissioning. Federal projects fail when accountability dilutes through layers of subcontractors. Aurevia's structure prevents that dilution.
iii
Lean Cost Structure
Lower overhead than national EPC firms means competitive pricing without the corner-cutting that smaller contractors have to resort to. Bondable, scaled appropriately to the federal opportunity set.

Have a federal opportunity in development?

Let's talk through the scope, the timeline, and the procurement vehicle.

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