ACEP and community partners present at EARNEST kickoff
March 06, 2024
础颁贰笔鈥檚 Michelle Wilber, Paul McKinley and community partners in Alaska shared their experience and planned project work at the at Stanford University on January 30.
With Stanford as its leader, EARNEST, or Equitable, Affordable & Resilient Nationwide Energy System Transition, is a consortium of 17 universities and four national laboratories. Their effort focuses on improving grid resilience in communities of various scales across North America.
The consortium鈥檚 projects include development and testing of open-source, generalizable modeling tools that can be used in pilot studies in order to assess resilience at the regional and state level, within smaller isolated grid communities, and in neighborhoods and cities.
Wilber, a research engineer at ACEP and PI for the EARNEST microgrid team, gave a presentation at a technical session, 鈥淪olutions for Remote or Isolated Grids.鈥
Wilber presented the ACEP scope for EARNEST, which centers on microgrid optimization, long-duration energy storage for microgrid renewables and implementation of 鈥渄emand choice鈥 control systems. Demand choice control systems enables community input at the individual and household level so that excess energy generated by renewables will be applied to their highest priority.
The plenary session, 鈥淐o-creation of Knowledge of Traditionally Underrepresented Communities,鈥 featured Chad Nordlum, energy project manager for the Native Village of Kotzebue, which is 础颁贰笔鈥檚 community partner.
鈥淭he energy transition is an opportunity for tribes to be part of the solution and bring value to their communities,鈥 Nordlum said, alongside panelists from Northwest Indian College, the California Environmental Justice Alliance and the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment.
Nordlum discussed the progress that Kotzebue has made already in deploying wind and solar resources as well as the ongoing challenges associated with continued reliance on imported fuel in the Northwest Arctic Borough.
As the projects within the EARNEST consortium officially get underway on a three-year timeline, ACEP will be working closely with community partners in Alaska as well as collaborators in Canada and Hawai'i to ensure that reliability and grid resilience strategies are developed to serve all communities regardless of size and geographic locations across the continent.