Power

Most buildings require electricity, or power, to function. Power is produced in power generators (see below) and consumed by buildings. Power is transferred via Power Lines, Power Poles, or Train Stations and Railways. Power is measured in megawatts (MW).

''Note: In the UI of some buildings, the unit of power is incorrectly displayed as MWh, which is a typo; the displayed value is still MW. This does not apply to Power Storage.''

Power grid
A power grid is a network consisting of power-generating and power-consuming buildings connected through Power Lines, Power Poles, Train Stations, and Railways. A graph of total power capacity, power production, and power consumption can be viewed by interacting with any Power Pole, generator, or Train Station on that grid.

Power Grids can be split using a Power Switch. Excess energy can be stored in Power Storages, to be used in cases of consumption exceeding production.

Power trip
If power consumption ever exceeds production and there is no energy in Power Storages to use, the power grid will trip. All connected power generators and power consumers in that grid will stop working. The sound effect of the trip can be heard from any part of the map, regardless of the distance between the tripped devices and the engineer.

The engineer can reset the circuit breaker by interacting at any of the connected power generators or Power Poles. In the UI, pull down the lever (refer to the image below) to restore the power. Before resetting, it is advised to either attach more power generators to the grid or temporarily remove power cables to some of the areas of the factory, otherwise, the power grid will simply overload again as soon as it is reactivated. Disconnecting enough power consumers will automatically reset the circuit breaker.

A power trip may also allow hostile creatures to respawn.

If there are no power production buildings at all (such as completely disconnecting the main power supply from power consumers), the buildings will simply switch off and there will be no trip. In this case, the buildings will resume function as soon as an adequate power supply is reconnected, without the need to reset the fuse.

Power graph
The Power Graph displays information about power production and consumption in the current power grid, as well as the sum of energy stored in all Power Storages on the grid.
 * Capacity (Light Grey) - overlaps on production. The maximum load that this power grid can withstand.
 * Production (Dark Grey) - overlaps on capacity. Energy that is produced by a generator connected to this grid.
 * Consumption (Orange) - Energy that is consumed by machines connected to this grid.
 * Maximum Consumption (Blue) - Energy that would be consumed when all machines connected to this network are started.

Power consumers

 * Most buildings require power to function. They are called power consumers. See individual building pages for their power requirement, measured in MW.
 * Each building in standby mode (whether the engineer flipped the standby switch, or if the building is not functioning due to a logistic issue) consumes 0.1 MW.
 * Underclocking early-game buildings to very low clock speeds allows them to consume less power while operating than when idle.
 * Indicator Lights show whether a building is operating and consuming power or not.

Power generators
Power generators convert fuels into power. Each type of generator building has its own set of fuel item types and power output.

All power generators with the exception of the Biomass Burner always operate at full capacity. Biomass Burners instead scale to power consumption and burn slower at lesser demand. For example, if grid capacity is 105 MW, provided by one Coal Generator producing 75 MW and one Biomass Burner producing 30 MW, and power consumption is 95 MW, the entire capacity of the Coal Generator will be used first followed by two thirds of the Biomass Burner's capacity, meaning fuel will be burned at two thirds of the rate it would at maximum demand. This also renders Biomass Burners unable to charge Power Storages.

Type of generators
There are five total types of power generators:

Clock speed
Overclocking is unlocked at the M.A.M.. The clock speed of buildings can be adjusted by interacting with it and adjusting the slider. are required to increase the clock speed beyond 100%, up to 250% maximum.

Underclocking can be done freely once overclocking has been researched and costs no Power Shards. See main article: Clock Speed''

Power consumer

 * Power consumers work at the rate of user-defined clock speed. For example, a Constructor works twice as fast when its clock speed is set to 200%.
 * It is always less power efficient when a building is overclocked.
 * In the above example, its power consumption will be greater than 2x the usual power consumption. This also means a building at 200% consumes more power than 2 equal buildings each operating at 100%.
 * On the other hand, underclock a building saves power.
 * Two constructors each working at 50% use less power compared to 1 Constructor working at 100%.
 * However, the footprint of the factory will be larger.

Power generator

 * Power generators overclock differently from power consumers. However, their fuel consumption rate is always proportional to the power production of the building. Hence, overclocking a power generator will not increase fuel efficiency.
 * This means the generator will burn the fuel faster or slower, but not produce more energy from the same amount of fuel.

Trivia

 * When interacting with any power building with a Power graph displayed, and if clicking on the graph for 6 times, the Power graph will first become glitched followed by a warning indicating that you are abusing the FICSIT property. The warning will go away if you close and re-open the Power graph.


 * A prototype of Satisfactory feature Wind Power, but it was removed.