So, microgrid technologies are destined to enhance tribal sovereignty, free communities from electric monopolies and net-metering only gives control back to utilities enabled by moral hazard.
Five communities — Parachute, Basalt, Granby, the Ute Mountain Ute Reservation and Silverton — each won a $100,000 Energizing Rural Communities prize from DOE to promote microgrids and clean energy projects. Silverton calls its resilience project GOLD — Goal of Less Dependency — and it has four objectives: prepare a resiliency plan for disasters, build a microgrid, find ways to move the old, inefficient infrastructure to electricity and join a regional climate action plan to transition to sustainable energy. [After “Snowpocalypse” killed their power, Silverton is turning on microgrids]Here in New Mexico the Kewa Pueblo is expanding a broadband network built in 2015 and assembling a photovoltaic microgrid. In my home state of South Dakota the Flandreau Santee Sioux Nation built a microgrid, so have the Oglala Lakota Nation and Standing Rock Sioux where wind chills and blowing snow are putting thousands at risk. Many other nations are also building microgrids.
ip image: the Sneffels Range rises above Ridgway.
Thank you @EnvDefenseFund for sharing our tribal energy success story with the Bad River Band of Lake Superior Tribe, as we supported their solar microgrid project. ⬇️ https://t.co/tTtoOcm1T4 #TribalEnergy #NativeEnergy #IndigenousPeoplesDay pic.twitter.com/OcOZ2WjKaA
— DOEIndianEnergy (@DOEIndianEnergy) October 9, 2023
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