Support CleanTechnica’s work through a Substack subscription or on Stripe.
Ever since Trump 2.0 ascended the golden staircase to the White House, clean energy has been boo’d, discredited, and denied. Individuals with conservative, closely-held cultural models and domains have spread renewable energy misinformation, sometimes without malice and often without enough prior knowledge to question clean energy controversies spread daily in the media.
But as CleanTechnica senior writer Steve Hanley explains, numerous groups are spreading the word about clean energy in a way that doesn’t resemble traditional trade associations. Instead, they focus more on everyday, relatable issues like affordable utility bills, economic growth, and removing barriers to building energy infrastructure.
That approach is common, too, among several Indigenous-led organizations and tribal nations across the US. Rather than awaiting clarity on current federal clean energy policy, Indigenous-led organizations and tribal nations are developing their own energy future — on their own terms.
While utilities and policymakers continue to grapple with rising electricity demand, grid resilience, and energy affordability, Indigenous-led organizations and tribal nations are quietly pioneering some of the country’s most innovative energy solutions—from workforce development and resilient microgrids to next-generation battery storage and distributed solar. And they’re not working in a vacuum.
Electric Innovation Initiative (EII) is a national 10-year initiative created by California Energy Commission Chair David Hochschild and Hawaii State Senator Chris Lee to advance electrification across the US through 2035. They have been supporting projects led by Indigenous led communities and are setting the agenda for how America powers itself. By convening leaders across government, industry, and philanthropy to accelerate high-impact solutions, a number of projects are setting the example with scalable models that address many of the same energy challenges utilities and policymakers are trying to solve nationwide.
Navaho Power collaborates with Tribal Nations to create renewable energy projects that honor sovereignty, respect cultural values, and drive community prosperity. Their mission is to deliver clean energy solutions that benefit all stakeholders while preserving the traditions and heritage of the lands they serve. This is important because, on Tribal lands, the dream of renewable energy often feels out of reach. Complex regulations, aging infrastructure, and partnerships that fail to honor cultural values can stand in the way.
Navajo Power works side-by-side with investors, other developers, and Tribal communities to develop renewable energy and energy storage projects that create real, lasting benefits. By simplifying the process of building utility-scale projects on Tribal lands, they provide guidance, expertise, and reduced investment risks. Vroom Power and Navajo Power, for example, have expanded access to distributed solar by reducing the cost and complexity of installation through a battery-free approach designed to scale.
Navaho Tribal Utility Authority (NTUA) was established in 1959 to address the absence of utilities on the 27,000 square-mile Navajo Nation. Since then, NTUA has grown into a self-sustaining, not-for-profit, successful tribally-owned enterprise. Organized for the operation, maintenance, and expansion of electric, communications, natural gas, water, wastewater and generation, their energy catalog includes off-grid residential solar services for the Navajo people at reasonable costs.
In addition to providing multi-utility services, other objectives of NTUA are to promote employment opportunities on the Navajo Nation, to improve the health and welfare of the residents of the Navajo Nation, and to enhance the standard of life. Urban Electric Power and Navajo Tribal Utility Authority are piloting next-generation, non-flammable zinc battery technology to bring reliable electricity to Navajo homes — technology that could reshape how distributed electrification works across the country.
San Pasqual Band of Mission Indians has one of the country’s most advanced tribal electrification projects — nearly 100 EV chargers, solar generation, battery storage, and a resilient community microgrid. Taking advantage of this area’s abundant natural resources, the San Pasqual Band of Mission Indians has followed an environmentally conscious approach of working with the land and the climate to support community energy sovereignty and security.
Red Cloud Renewables: This 501(c)(3) organization on Pine Ridge Reservation, South Dakota empowers Native American communities by offering vital education in solar installation, sustainable building practices, and weatherization techniques. In fact, they’re the nation’s only Indigenous-led renewable energy training campus — more than 1,100 Native students trained while installing solar, heat pumps, and weatherization in their own communities.
Through these initiatives, they equip individuals with the knowledge and skills necessary to implement renewable energy solutions, construct environmentally friendly structures, and improve the resilience of homes against harsh weather conditions. This impactful work directly benefits Native American communities by fostering self-sufficiency, reducing energy costs, and promoting sustainability, thereby enhancing the overall quality of life within these populations.
Final Thoughts about Tribal Nations and Renewable Energy Innovations
The greatest economic competitors to the US are already electrifying fast and capturing more of the marketplace. Every sector, from public safety to residential construction to heavy industry and transportation, is a candidate for innovation. Under the Biden-Harris Administration, the DOE had provided historic funding for Tribal communities; commitments ensured that tribal nations would retain their agency as they worked to deploy clean, stable and affordable power to those that need it the most.
Today tribal nations have become leaders in the solutions the whole country needs to become energy independent. Indigenous land constitutes just two percent of total US territory but has about six percent of the country’s renewable energy resource potential. Investors are scouring the landscape, looking for every available opportunity to build new projects, so many of them could be located on tribal lands.
Sign up for CleanTechnica’s Weekly Substack for Zach and Scott’s in-depth analyses and high level summaries, sign up for our daily newsletter, and follow us on Google News!
Have a tip for CleanTechnica? Want to advertise? Want to suggest a guest for our CleanTech Talk podcast? Contact us here.
Sign up for our daily newsletter for 15 new cleantech stories a day. Or sign up for our weekly one on top stories of the week if daily is too frequent.


CleanTechnica uses affiliate links. See our policy here.
CleanTechnica’s Comment Policy