“It secures the community’s long-term energy sovereignty and will inspire more public and private sector distributed energy development efforts on Tribal lands.” “The impact of the Soboba Microgrid project goes beyond kilowatt-hours and savings,” Guillermo Gomez, business development manager at Scale Microgrids, said. The company said that Tribal communities historically suffer from higher service costs, higher interconnection fees, more blackouts or brownouts and remote and distant service locations. In addition to reducing the facility’s greenhouse gas emissions footprint by the equivalent of 4,800 passenger vehicles, the system will enable mission critical operations to continue during utility outages. The advanced microgrid controls know when the utility costs are highest or if there is an outage, proactively selecting the optimal energy source. Scheduled to be completed in June 2024, Scale is building a microgrid with solar photovoltaic energy production and battery energy storage. The company will build and install a renewables microgrid, pairing 1.5 megawatts of rooftop solar and a 6 megawatts per hour energy storage system.
Building on its past success with solar projects at the Soboba Indian Reservation, the Soboba Band of Luiseño Indians partnered with Scale Microgrids for a project at its Soboba Casino Resort.