How To Survive Without Electricity
87Situations Where There May Be No Electricity
It's interesting to read that electricity has only been a common household item in the last 50 or so years. Before that, people have survived for ages - so a lack of electricity for any duration of time is something that can be overcome. As human beings, we have had the experience and now have the added help of technological advances to survive without electricity.
In the short term, many of us experience power outages in our homes during the winter seasons where storms take out some local power lines. This might mean we are without power for the best part of a day. In the event of hurricanes, electricity may be cut for a more extended period of time (1-2 weeks). Generally speaking, short term survival can be overcome (with relatively little difficulty, just inconvenience - see below).
But what if some major crisis occurred and left entire countries without electricity for months or even years? Granted, odds are slim, but just what if it happened? Our grandparents and maybe our parents might have some ideas, having possible experienced this during their childhood. The majority of us wouldn't have a clue.
The aim of this hub is to set the scene for a situation where this is no electricity and look at options on how to survive in the short term and long term. Some photos of antique items are also presented, from my grandparents time, with a description of life during a time with no or little electricity. If we lost all electricity forever tomorrow, people now living in third world countries would be the best prepared for survival - they live through this scenario on a daily basis.
Power Outage
No Electricity = No More of These Things:
- TV
- Playstation / Xbox / Wii
- Fridge
- Freezer
- Microwave / Oven
- Washing Machines
- Computers
- Internet
- DVD Players
- Airconditioners/Fans/Heaters
- Electric Guitars
- Lifts / Escalators
- EFTPOS, credit cards or ATMs (yikes!)
- Phones
Most of the youth of today would be bored out of their brains in an instant without these items! Well, I guess they would be ok until their batteries ran out.
Emergency Lighting
It wasn't too long ago that people were active during the day and simply went to sleep when the sun went down. Candlelight dinners were the norm. With electricity came discos and cities that never sleep. Now, it's hard to imagine life without a simple bedroom light.
So candles or oil lamps and matches are one option, however they are limited in that if you don't have candles or fuel for the lamp, you don't have light.
Another way to ensure emergency lighting is to purchase a couple of solar or mechanically powered torches. You can use one while the other charges. Having said that though, both can be charged at the same time during the day as you wouldn't need them then.
Drinking Water
Even if you have a rainwater tank, no electricity means that pumps would not work to bring the water to your tap. Sure, having a generator would be handy for a few days, or as long as you have fuel.
Third world countries have community water pumps that are operated mechanically (by hand). Going one step further, condensation from leaves can be collected for drinking. Alternatively you can find a fresh water stream out bush.
Great "Electricity Free" Items
Cooking Without Electricity
You could quite easily cook a meal using a little portable gas stove - either a barbeque style apparatus, or something as small as a bunsen burner. But you'd obviously need gas. Some people used to do a lot of their cooking outside in wood-fired ovens. Some communities would make their own dough and then carry it over to the local oven where they may give the owner a fee of two pieces of bread in exchange for baking their buns.
Food Storage Without Electricity
Not having electricity brings the added difficulty of food storage. Most foods would have to be non-perishable, pantry items. For meats you could salt and dry them. Pickling vegetables is another preservation technique. If you live on a farm or have a bit of land, you could plant some fruit trees and grow your own vegetables (& herbs).
Communications
It would be very hard to maintain the speed and efficiency of communication between a large number of people simultaneously without electricity. Communication relates to our phones, cell phones, televisions and the internet. Radios would be the primary source of communication, as they were before television. There are some radios (seen on the above right) that you can buy which rely on solar or mechanically generated power to operate.
Hygiene
Without a complicated water and sewerage pipe system and pumps to have showers, people used to take baths. Water was boiled over an open fire and mixed with some water at room temperature to get warm water for their bath. Consequently, baths were quick and people would get out before the water turned cold. Nowadays, having a warm shower is a luxury that is taken for granted.
Before electricity
Washing & Ironing Clothes
Without a washing machine, people in third world countries wash all of their clothes by hand and without a dryer, they hang them up outside to dry. To iron their clothes, coal irons were used. Hot coals were placed inside the iron to generate the heat in the absense of heating elements and electricity.
Entertaining Yourself - Electricity Free Activities
What would you do without the Wii or the TV??
Some suggestions include taking up the acoustic guitar, tamborine, drums or wind instruments. Sing! Take up sports again (the physical kind, not the electronic games). Table tennis. Hopscotch. Marbles. Yo-yo's. Jump rope. Read books. Gardening. Farming. I suspect that without electricity, trades that involved craftsmanship would re-emerge and people will begin to value those who are skilled with their hands and take pride in their work. Woodworkers. Artists. People who can sew, knit etc. Chefs. If you put your mind to it, you would come up with many more hobbies that do not rely upon electricity. Sure, electricity makes things easier but we should be able to survive without it.
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Further Reading
- How Do You Live Without Electricity, by Anita Evangelista
This is an article by Anita Evangelista from Issue #73 of Backwoods Home Magazine ("practical ideas for self-reliant living"). Sounds like a great magazine to subscribe to. - How to Survive a Week Without Electricity After a Hurricane - Associated Content
Surviving a week or longer without electricity can be done if preparations are made ahead of time and even if none are made. - How to Survive a Catastrophic Electrical Outage
Easier read than done!
CommentsLoading...
I can't live without electricity!
I remember losing electricity when an Hurricane breezed by our island. I thought it was the end of the world...I was 8 years old :)
I never thought of these things. Well, it has really made me appreciate of the the things that we take for granted. Great hub!
I love having no electricity for a time, but then how do you charge your digital camera? I've just bought solar chargers to do just that!
ilove having power outages i hope we have more this year then all the other years
Why dont u go for a perpetual driven machine
excellent article
Thanks this really helped me write my science assesment :-)
Maybe the Amish have it right.
This hub gives you a lot to think about. We lived without electricity for about 5 days. Thank God I had a fireplace. We used it for heat and to prepare meals. I felt like little house on the prairie! Voted up
Good article hope I never have to use some of the information in it though!
*Suggestion* with regards to hygeine. There is a solution to showering without electricity that is inexpensive, easy and effective. Solar showers. They are gravity based technology and based on the principle that dark colors attract heat. It usually costs about $14 to $25 cdn. During the warm seasons it can be placed outside in direct sunlight for a few hours, in colder weather or regions it should be as effective to set it in greenhouses( please noteI have not tested this myself and would appreciate any feedback from others who have.)
hi this is a nice blog lol
REALLY A NICE ARTICLE
I have 2 solar showers abou $6 at Walmart. They work in the summer. I put up 2 shower curtains for privacy and set up my shampoo, ect. And took long showers. About 3-4 showers per bag. In the cooler months, I heated the water and poured it in the bag. Hung the bags over what use to be my showerhead. Worked for me!
I have been without running water for 3 years. I catch water in 55 gal drums; I have three full in the house and two that catch the water.
Having eletricity is like not having candy!! :)
I could survive with eletricity. I already heat and cook on a wood stove. I also use solar products. Get ready folks, it's going to happen sooner or later. Be prepared or be dead. Period!
Stumbled on this blog because of being in the dark, nice article though :(
If electricity went out in the US, people would die by the thousands. You may be able to get some water and you may stay warm, but where would you get food. The stores would be enmity in the matter of days. If you live in the country you may have a chance. Most people don't know how to grow there own food and if they do it takes time.



















Princessa Level 3 Commenter 3 years ago
Isn't it amazing how we just take for granted all those things. Only when we do not have them we realize how lost we are. We used to have lots of electricity cuts in Peru during the 80s and we somehow learnt to live with it. Not long ago we had an electricity cut in France during a storm and it reminded me how dependant I've become in all the appliances I use in a daily basis.
Thumbs ups for a great hub!