(NextGov) – An Air Force base in Texas is getting ready to test its infrastructure against an electromagnetic pulse, or EMP, attack and needs to do preliminary site surveys to design future tests.

Officials at Joint Base San Antonio in Lackland, Texas issued a request for quote for an EMP-tailored survey of the Petroleum, Oil, and Lubrication, or POL, complex, which consists of multiple buildings in two areas of the base connected by an underground pipeline.

The Air Force is conducting this test, and others, in adherence with a Trump-era executive order requiring the military and key agencies involved in securing critical infrastructure to put more resources into defending against EMP attacks, in which an electromagnetic wave could potentially knock out all electronic components in its wake.


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“This will ensure critical fuel infrastructure remains operational, as well as contributes to a national Dissuasion Strategy intended to preclude adversarial use of EMP as a weapon,” according to the performance work statement.

The initial tests won’t include actual electromagnetic waves, but rather a review of “engineering plans, relevant schematics and other applicable documentation to locate, identify and quantify infrastructure potentially vulnerable to EMP waveforms.” That work will be wrapped into a report used to inform the next stage of EMP vulnerability testing. READ MORE