Keep
Food Safe Using Dry Ice During a Power Outage
Storm-related
or Summertime Power Outages - Frozen or Refrigerated
Food
During a temporary or long-term
power outage, dry ice may by your best answer to keep your
frozen and refrigerated foods safe. Summertime is the most
common time for power outages in many parts of the country.
The Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA), the U.S. Center for Disease Control and
Prevention, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and the U.S. Department
of Agriculture all confirm the importance of dry ice in
the event of a power outage.
How
do you use dry ice in refrigerators & freezers? Ten
pounds of dry ice can last up to a day in a closed container.
During a power outage, place dry
ice on the top shelf of the freezer to keep foods frozen
for up to four days. Place the same quantity of dry ice
in the lower part of the refrigerator to keep foods cold.
Dry ice sublimates (turns from a solid to a gas), so care
must be taken that the gas pressure is not allowed to build
up. Continental Carbonic locations have charts that will
assist you in determining the correct amount of dry ice
you will need. If you are evacuating an area, having a
cooler with dry ice will allow you to transport perishable
food or medicines while you are traveling.
Take Safety Precautions
When Working with Dry Ice during a Power Outage:
- DO
NOT store dry ice in an airtight container
or in an ice chest with the latches locked down.
The gas pressure of the sublimating solid dry ice
will become explosive. Even if the container does
not rupture, the force on the lid or top may be enough
to cause severe injury. Leave the lid unlatched. As
pressure builds, it will be relieved and kept safe.
- Keep
the cooler or container in an area with good ventilation.
Carbon dioxide is heavier than air and will settle in
the lowest areas of a room. The best place for storing
a container with dry ice is a garage or a room with a
ground level door, or window that can be left open.
- Wrap
dry ice in a towel or newspaper and place on top of items
to be kept frozen and below items to be kept cool.
- Do
not allow bottles or cans to come in direct contact with
dry ice. They will freeze and may rupture as their contents
expand.
- Dry
ice is a solid with a temperature of -109° Fahrenheit.
Contact with bare hands or skin may cause severe frostbite. Touching
dry ice can be like touching a hot coal - the cold can
burn just as quickly and just as severely as fire.
- Depending
on how often the cooler is opened, contents will stay
cold for three to four days.
- Do
not allow children to play with dry ice.
Where can you buy dry
ice during a power outage? Continental
Carbonic has 34
dry ice locations throughout the United States to
serve you. Walk up to any of them or call them
and purchase dry ice. Continental Carbonic will
sell you the dry ice products you need in the quantity
you need with the appropriate containers, gloves, and
equipment you need to use the dry ice.
Call Continental Carbonic toll-free
at 800-DRY-ICE2 to buy dry ice and get information about
ways to use dry ice. |