Energized by power shortage
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- The energy shortage that has threatened Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa with possible blackouts has given one business a surge of
money.
Other businesses’ fears that blackouts could interrupt their work have
translated into rapid growth for MGE UPS Systems, which sells backup
equipment to protect against energy inconsistencies.
“The Internet and PC technology has penetrated our lives on a broad
scale faster than any industry in the U.S. ever has,” said MGE President
Dave Petratis. “Especially in the last 10 years, we have had an Internet
and PC revolution and nobody’s building power plants. The speed of
introduction that nobody saw is creating the energy problems we have
today, and it doesn’t look like there are any easy solutions. People
don’t realize that clicking a mouse and leaving a computer on uses
electrical signals. But the energy problems have been good for us. We’ve
been very successful, far exceeding our own expectations.”
MGE produces and sells uninterruptable power supply systems, which
control power flow to a location and “clean up” the energy before it’s
used, Petratis said.
The systems protect against burnouts, blackouts and surges, and
immediately switches to a battery -- without any gap in energy flow --
when the power goes out, he said, adding that although generators are
used for longer blackouts, batteries fill the gaps between when the power
turns off and the generators turn on.
The company is made up of mergers between four technology-based
companies -- EPE Technologies, Merlin Gerin, Topaz and Square D.
Merlin Gerin, a French company, invented the first UPS system for
military defense use more than 30 years ago, Petratis said. Since then,
its business has shifted to mainly computer and Internet protection.
Signs of the company’s success include, in the last year, 344 new
employees, two new plants in Santa Ana comprising 200,000 square feet,
and $600,000 in bonuses distributed to the company’s 900 Costa Mesa and
Santa Ana employees last week.
The company has averaged a 32.5% increase in profit per year for the
last five years, with a 52% increase each year for the last two, Petratis
said.
Ed Fawcett, Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce’s chief executive, said
that when Petratis took over the business in 1993, the company was
considering moving out of the country.
Fawcett attributes the company’s success to the Internet explosion and
to Petratis’ management skills.
“Some markets have really opened to the business since [Petratis] took
over,” Fawcett said. “The Internet explosion created servers that require
UPSs, and other markets that didn’t exist when [MGE] came on board now
require UPSs. When I first met [Petratis,] strict business policies out
of Sacramento were causing a lot of flight out of the state. The company
was considering [moving,] but Petratis focused on correct marketing and
turned business around. Now it’s just bursting at the seams.”
Although the energy crisis has increased business, Petratis said that
an end to the crisis will not jeopardize MGE.
Internet use -- a major driving force for the business -- is not going
away, and new cellular technology in the works will require new cell
stations, which also require UPSs, he said.
The one threat, Petratis said, is new technology -- such as
microturbans and fuel cells -- that might fill gaps in the energy
industry.
“Those are both a threat and an opportunity,” he said. The new
technology “could have an effect on UPSs. But in the short term, we’re in
pretty good shape.”
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