The City of Santa Monica, often recognized for its climate friendly policies, embarked on a microgrid project to incorporate renewable energy generation, storage, and electric vehicle charging.
The City received a $1.5M grant from the California Energy Commission’s Electric Program Investment Charge (EPIC) to run a feasibility study and design a microgrid. The microgrid would provide clean, reliable power to the City Yards municipal facility and potentially incorporate adjacent sites, including commercial development, transit use, and museums.
Arup was the lead consultant to the City of Santa Monica in the development of the microgrid project. Aligning efforts with the City Yards redevelopment, Arup conducted an 18-month study and produced a multi-user microgrid feasibility analysis, examining socioeconomic, financial, and technical factors, as well as the knowledge transfer plan for the City.
Arup’s feasibility study was an important step to determining the standards for microgrid development in California, providing necessary stepping stones for local governments, financial entities, regulatory agencies, and other partners to work out operational challenges as well as identifying major hurdles and barriers to deployment.