Power outages are on the rise. These drones could help : Short Wave One in four U.S. households experiences a power outage each year. Scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory are working on technology they hope will help fix electric grids: drones. They're betting that 2-ft. large drones connected to "smart" electric grids are a cost-effective step to a more electrified future.

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One unexpected solution to electric grid blackouts: drones

One unexpected solution to electric grid blackouts: drones

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In the United States, one in every four households experiences a power outage annually. Scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory are working on a set of drones connected to a "smart" electric grid to try to help change that. Ali Majdfar/Getty Images hide caption

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Ali Majdfar/Getty Images

In the United States, one in every four households experiences a power outage annually. Scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory are working on a set of drones connected to a "smart" electric grid to try to help change that.

Ali Majdfar/Getty Images

A combination of extreme weather events, record-setting summer temperatures and already-aging infrastructure is putting strain on the U.S. power grid. In the past ten years, the country has seen 60 percent more weather-related outages than during the 2000s, according to work done by nonprofit Climate Central. And one in four U.S. households experiences a power outage annually.

Scientists at Oak Ridge National Laboratory are working on technology they hope will help fix electric grids: drones. They're betting that 2-ft. large drones connected to "smart" electric grids are a cost-effective step to a more electrified future.

Have an idea for a future episode? We'd love to know — email us at shortwave@npr.org!

Listen to Short Wave on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at plus.npr.org/shortwave.

This episode was produced by Jessica Yung, edited by Rebecca Ramirez and fact-checked by Tyler Jones. Kwesi Lee was the audio engineer.