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Why NFPA 110 Matters for Your Greenville Facility’s Backup Power

Written by Powerchampions | Feb 5, 2026 6:15:00 AM

For hospitals and critical facilities in Greenville, backup power is essential—it's a life-safety system. When utility power fails, every second counts. Patient safety, clinical outcomes, data integrity, and regulatory compliance all rely on one thing: your emergency power system working precisely as intended.

That’s why NFPA 110, the National Fire Protection Association standard for Emergency and Standby Power Systems, exists. And why understanding and complying with it is essential for healthcare and other facilities across Upstate South Carolina. It is important to understand that NFPA 110 is not just limited to healthcare facilities.

Across Greenville and the Upstate, many non-healthcare facilities are also required to comply with NFPA 110 because their generators support Fire and Life Safety (FLS) systems. Hotels, commercial buildings, parking structures, and mixed-use developments rely on emergency power to operate systems such as:

  • Emergency and egress lighting
  • Elevators used for emergency response
  • Parking gates and access controls
  • Fire alarm and notification systems
  • Smoke control and life-safety ventilation

In these environments, generator failure may not impact patient care—but it can still put occupants, first responders, and the public at risk.

As Greenville continues to grow rapidly, demand on the electrical grid is increasing. New developments, expanding healthcare campuses, manufacturing growth, and more extreme weather events are adding stress to power infrastructure. Power outages are now more common and unpredictable, and their impact is greater than ever.

The Growing Risk: Power Outages in a Rapidly Expanding Region
Across the U.S., utilities are reporting:

    • Increased grid congestion in high-growth regions
    • Aging infrastructure under heavier load
    • Greater exposure to severe weather events
    • More frequent short-duration and extended outages

Greenville and the surrounding Upstate are no exception. As healthcare systems expand to accommodate a growing population, electrical demand rises, and so does the risk of outages. For hospitals, outpatient centers, surgical facilities, and data-driven healthcare settings, even a brief power loss can jeopardize safety, patient care, and compliance. NFPA 110 is designed to ensure that doesn’t happen.

What Is NFPA 110, and Who Does It Apply To?

NFPA 110 sets minimum performance standards for Emergency and Standby Power Supply Systems (EPSS). Although it is often associated with hospitals, it also applies to any facility where emergency power is required to support life-safety systems.

This includes:

    • Hospitals and healthcare campuses
    • Hotels and hospitality facilities
    • High-rise and mixed-use buildings
    • Parking structures and gated facilities
    • Manufacturing and industrial sites with FLS obligations
    • Municipal and commercial buildings

NFPA 110 governs the design, installation, testing, operation, maintenance, and documentation of backup power as a safety system, not just mechanical equipment. Together, these frameworks exist for one reason: to protect human life when utility power is lost.

Healthcare vs. Non-Healthcare: Different Facilities, Same Life-Safety Standard

For healthcare facilities, NFPA 110 Level 1 systems protect patients whose lives may depend on continuous power. For non-healthcare facilities, NFPA 110 ensures that occupants can safely exit, that emergency responders can access buildings, and that required safety systems remain operational during outages.

In both cases, failure is unacceptable and often a code violation.

The difference is not whether NFPA 110 applies, but how the risk is expressed:

    • In hospitals: clinical and patient safety risk
    • In non-healthcare facilities: occupant safety, emergency access, and liability risk

In short: NFPA 110 treats backup power as a clinical safety system, not a building asset.

 

Key NFPA 110 Requirements Healthcare Leaders Should Understand

While the standard is technical, several requirements directly impact executive and facility leadership:

    • System Performance: Generators and ATS systems must meet strict start-up and load transfer timelines.
    • Routine Testing: Regular load testing and transfer testing are required, not optional.
    • Fuel Quality Management: Fuel must be tested, treated, and documented to prevent failure.
    • Maintenance Programs: Preventive maintenance must follow documented schedules.
    • Documentation & Records: Testing, inspections, deficiencies, and corrective actions must be recorded and retained.
    • Deficiency Response: Identified issues must be addressed within defined timeframes.

 

Failure in any of these areas can lead to compliance citations, increased liability, and most importantly risk to patient safety.

 

The Compliance Gap Facilities Often Miss

Many non-healthcare facility owners assume NFPA 110 does not apply because they are “not a hospital.” Others believe compliance ends once the generator is installed.

Common gaps include:

    • Generators installed correctly but not maintained to NFPA 110
    • ATS systems tested inconsistently or undocumented
    • FLS loads added over time without load validation
    • Incomplete records during AHJ inspections

NFPA 110 compliance is ongoing, not a one-time install requirement.

Why Local Expertise Matters in Greenville

While NFPA 110 is a national standard, compliance is enforced locally, by AHJs who understand regional conditions, grid behavior, and facility risk profiles.

PowerChampions of Greenville brings deep experience supporting healthcare and critical facilities in the Upstate, with a strong understanding of:

    • Local AHJ expectations
    • Regional grid challenges
    • Healthcare-specific power system design
    • NFPA 110 testing and documentation requirements
    • Life-safety-focused maintenance programs

Our team collaborates with facility leadership to ensure emergency power systems are not just compliant on paper but also reliable in real-world conditions.

 

Backup Power Is a Leadership Responsibility

We can provide you with trusted NFPA 110 expertise in Greenville, SC

PowerChampions of Greenville specializes in generator service, ATS testing, and compliance support for healthcare and mission-critical facilities. We assist leadership teams in ensuring their backup power systems meet NFPA 110 standards and perform reliably when lives depend on them.