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Power Is In Our Hands: Native Renewables
August 14, 2020
4 minute read

Native Renewables' mission it is to empower Native American families to achieve energy independence.

Power Is In Our Hands: Native Renewables By Wahleah Johns
Originally published by

Cooper Hewitt Design Journal

on July 20, 2020
Buttons advocating solar energy:
1970s and 1980s

Access to electricity is a human right, essential to people’s health, security, and livelihoods. Of the twenty thousand families in the United States without access to electricity, three-quarters live on the Navajo Nation. Despite their lands providing fossil fuels that have powered the West for fifty years, these families have been left in the dark.

Native Renewables is an Indigenous, women-led organization committed to empowering these families with affordable, reliable, and clean electricity and catalyzing a just transition for the Navajo Nation. Engineers, solar entrepreneurs, and tribal members from the Navajo and Hopi tribes make up Native Renewables, whose mission it is to empower Native American families to achieve energy independence. Our values are to provide a holistic approach to clean energy projects with four pillars: tribal sustainability, regenerative culture, engagement, and a thriving organization.

Access to electricity for Navajo families is expensive, as power-line extension is costly and no financing options exist for low-income families to pay for power. With these limiting factors in mind, Native Renewables has designed a rural electrification program called the Navajo Clean Energy Program that will offer each of the fifteen thousand Navajo households access to a lease and an off-grid photovoltaic (PV) system + storage to power lights, a refrigerator, cell phones, and appliances. This program has a workforce development component to train Native American solar installers to build and maintain off-grid PV systems and generate solar jobs.

Native Renewables staff and contractors are from the communities that do not have access to electricity and know there is a demand for cost-effective renewable energy solutions to provide basic energy needs. Our team consists of tribal members with thirty-five years of solar experience, and renewable energy research and development. We have two mechanical engineers, three solar installers, one solar entrepreneur, and one grassroots organizer who have shaped our strategy to solve energy access on our homelands.

Tribes and Indigenous Peoples disproportionately represent both dirty energy and clean energy resources, where 80 percent of fossil fuels and 80 percent of the world’s biodiversity are on and near Indigenous Peoples’ lands. Indigenous Peoples’ land base and ecological traditional knowledge can provide guidance and alliance toward solutions to heal the planet and communities.

The Navajo Nation is the largest Native American tribe in the US, with a landmass the size of West Virginia occupying northeastern Arizona, northwestern New Mexico, and southern Utah. The majority of Navajo families live in rural locations, co-managing miles of lands from previous generations. These families are pastoralists, farmers, ranchers, herbalists, healers, artisans, teachers, coal miners, coal plant workers, mechanics, builders, tribal employees, and entrepreneurs, all working with the terrains constrained by Wi-Fi/cell service, unpaved roads, no running water, and extreme weather conditions. The Navajo have an unemployment rate of 48.5 percent and average per capita income of $10,695, demonstrating the need for low-cost energy solutions.

Native Renewables’ energy access strategy comes from eighteen months of researching Navajo families’ fuel costs and the barriers to accessing electricity. We have engaged our tribal utility and US and international off-grid solar providers to help understand the market that matches customers with affordability, system size, and commitment.

In order to scale off-grid PV knowledge and installation we’ve designed a solar workforce program that includes both in-classroom and hands-on learning. In October 2019, Native Renewables offered our first eight-week solar workforce training to teach trainees how to design, build, and maintain off-grid PV systems. We held the training on the Navajo Nation to create educational access for rural Navajo and Hopi applicants. Training includes the fundamentals of energy and PV systems; safety; electricity and wiring taught by a certified electrician; balance of system components; battery storage; design of systems; and site evaluation. The soft skills that are incorporated are customer service (Interface and education), marketing for services, and project reporting. In November 2019 we graduated all ten trainees of the solar workforce program, exceeding all of our expectations and preparing these ten off-grid solar installers for work.

The first phase of the Navajo Clean Energy Program is to deploy up to one hundred off-grid PV systems as a demonstration project to refine products, financing, key partnerships, installation, and service within one year. We will collect data and use the lessons learned to refine the economics and mechanisms to scale toward the remaining 14,900 homes on Navajo land.

The Navajo Nation has some of the best solar resources in the world and seeks investment to spark a restorative economy that fits the needs of the people. With solar prices dropping and the coal industry becoming less economical, Native Renewables sees this as an opportune time to create a solar workforce and energy access program to tackle the growing unemployment rates and offer job training skills closer to home.

We see systemic change occurring at each home that uses off-grid solar— where the most underserved demographic in the US will become natural leaders of sustainable living by managing and owning their power with the sun and modeling Indigenous self-reliance and self-determination.

Wahleah Johns is a member of the Navajo (Dine) tribe and comes from the community of Forest Lake, Arizona, atop Black Mesa. She is cofounder and executive director of Native Renewables. Her work with the Black Mesa Water Coalition and Navajo Green Economy Coalition has led to groundbreaking legislative victories for groundwater protection, green jobs, and environmental justice. In 2019, she was awarded the Nathan Cummings Foundation Fellowship.

What You Can Do 1

Find your address on Project Sunroof and see how much you can save with solar

2

Companies like Arcadia match you to clean energy

3

Most importantly, make sure everyone around you has the same access

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