Lessons Learned from Energy Commission Microgrid Projects : Best Practices from EPIC PON-14-301 Grant Recipients

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Microgrid demonstration and implementation is a major focus for the California Energy Commission and has been supported by funds administered by the commission under the Electric Program Investment Charge (EPIC) program for the past 10 years. Seven EPIC-funded microgrid projects funded in 2015 recently concluded their three-year implementation timelines. These seven projects demonstrated low-carbon-based microgrids for critical facilities and high-penetration, renewable-based microgrids. The microgrid developers and customers were early adopters who experienced many challenges and gained valuable insights about
microgrid planning, implementation, and operation. The California Energy Commission gathered lessons learned during the grant period by interviewing key personnel involved in the projects. Aggregating the lessons and best practices across participants will inform future microgrid deployments in California and additional research and development needs. Together, the lessons and best practices from the seven EPIC-funded microgrid demonstration projects reflect considerable knowledge and experience
gained by project participants. These microgrids provided compelling value for their customers and communities, even during the early demonstration phases. Project developers have pursued many new microgrid opportunities armed with the expertise gained from these experiences, and multiple participating customers are expanding or building new microgrids for their facilities. Interviews with participants showed basic best practices related to communication, coordination, and technology integration that are critical for complex, multistakeholder, and multivalue projects in a developing market. This report describes detailed lessons learned, from up-front planning guidance to actionable interconnection recommendations. Based on the experiences with these seven projects, the California Energy Commission funding added value in several key areas related to advancing microgrids in California. Ongoing public funding support will be important to continue to standardize microgrid technology and provide longer-term performance evaluation for existing and future microgrid demonstration projects

Citation Formats

TY - DATA AB - Microgrid demonstration and implementation is a major focus for the California Energy Commission and has been supported by funds administered by the commission under the Electric Program Investment Charge (EPIC) program for the past 10 years. Seven EPIC-funded microgrid projects funded in 2015 recently concluded their three-year implementation timelines. These seven projects demonstrated low-carbon-based microgrids for critical facilities and high-penetration, renewable-based microgrids. The microgrid developers and customers were early adopters who experienced many challenges and gained valuable insights about microgrid planning, implementation, and operation. The California Energy Commission gathered lessons learned during the grant period by interviewing key personnel involved in the projects. Aggregating the lessons and best practices across participants will inform future microgrid deployments in California and additional research and development needs. Together, the lessons and best practices from the seven EPIC-funded microgrid demonstration projects reflect considerable knowledge and experience gained by project participants. These microgrids provided compelling value for their customers and communities, even during the early demonstration phases. Project developers have pursued many new microgrid opportunities armed with the expertise gained from these experiences, and multiple participating customers are expanding or building new microgrids for their facilities. Interviews with participants showed basic best practices related to communication, coordination, and technology integration that are critical for complex, multistakeholder, and multivalue projects in a developing market. This report describes detailed lessons learned, from up-front planning guidance to actionable interconnection recommendations. Based on the experiences with these seven projects, the California Energy Commission funding added value in several key areas related to advancing microgrids in California. Ongoing public funding support will be important to continue to standardize microgrid technology and provide longer-term performance evaluation for existing and future microgrid demonstration projects AU - Vogel, Laura A2 - Corfee, Karin A3 - Asmus, Peter A4 - Bilbao, Sarah A5 - Collins, Kathryn DB - C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange DP - Open EI | National Laboratory of the Rockies DO - KW - Battery energy storage KW - Power electronics and inverters KW - Power electronics KW - Inverters KW - Solar KW - Photovoltaics KW - PV KW - Diesel generators KW - Other liquid-fuel generators KW - Financing KW - Business models KW - Case studies KW - Performance KW - Maintenance and operations KW - Operations KW - Maintenance KW - Commissioning KW - Planning and design KW - Planning KW - Design LA - English DA - 2024/06/01 PY - 2024 PB - Navigant Consulting Inc. T1 - Lessons Learned from Energy Commission Microgrid Projects : Best Practices from EPIC PON-14-301 Grant Recipients UR - https://cmix.openei.org/submissions/252 ER -
Export Citation to RIS
Vogel, Laura, et al. Lessons Learned from Energy Commission Microgrid Projects : Best Practices from EPIC PON-14-301 Grant Recipients. Navigant Consulting Inc., 1 June, 2024, C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange. https://cmix.openei.org/submissions/252.
Vogel, L., Corfee, K., Asmus, P., Bilbao, S., & Collins, K. (2024). Lessons Learned from Energy Commission Microgrid Projects : Best Practices from EPIC PON-14-301 Grant Recipients. [Data set]. C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange. Navigant Consulting Inc.. https://cmix.openei.org/submissions/252
Vogel, Laura, Karin Corfee, Peter Asmus, Sarah Bilbao, and Kathryn Collins. Lessons Learned from Energy Commission Microgrid Projects : Best Practices from EPIC PON-14-301 Grant Recipients. Navigant Consulting Inc., June, 1, 2024. Distributed by C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange. https://cmix.openei.org/submissions/252
@misc{CMIX_Dataset_252, title = {Lessons Learned from Energy Commission Microgrid Projects : Best Practices from EPIC PON-14-301 Grant Recipients}, author = {Vogel, Laura and Corfee, Karin and Asmus, Peter and Bilbao, Sarah and Collins, Kathryn}, abstractNote = {Microgrid demonstration and implementation is a major focus for the California Energy Commission and has been supported by funds administered by the commission under the Electric Program Investment Charge (EPIC) program for the past 10 years. Seven EPIC-funded microgrid projects funded in 2015 recently concluded their three-year implementation timelines. These seven projects demonstrated low-carbon-based microgrids for critical facilities and high-penetration, renewable-based microgrids. The microgrid developers and customers were early adopters who experienced many challenges and gained valuable insights about
microgrid planning, implementation, and operation. The California Energy Commission gathered lessons learned during the grant period by interviewing key personnel involved in the projects. Aggregating the lessons and best practices across participants will inform future microgrid deployments in California and additional research and development needs. Together, the lessons and best practices from the seven EPIC-funded microgrid demonstration projects reflect considerable knowledge and experience
gained by project participants. These microgrids provided compelling value for their customers and communities, even during the early demonstration phases. Project developers have pursued many new microgrid opportunities armed with the expertise gained from these experiences, and multiple participating customers are expanding or building new microgrids for their facilities. Interviews with participants showed basic best practices related to communication, coordination, and technology integration that are critical for complex, multistakeholder, and multivalue projects in a developing market. This report describes detailed lessons learned, from up-front planning guidance to actionable interconnection recommendations. Based on the experiences with these seven projects, the California Energy Commission funding added value in several key areas related to advancing microgrids in California. Ongoing public funding support will be important to continue to standardize microgrid technology and provide longer-term performance evaluation for existing and future microgrid demonstration projects}, url = {https://cmix.openei.org/submissions/252}, year = {2024}, howpublished = {C-MIX - Community Microgrid Information Exchange, Navigant Consulting Inc., https://cmix.openei.org/submissions/252}, note = {Accessed: 2026-06-17} }

Details

Data from Jun 1, 2024

Last updated Mar 30, 2026

Submitted Jun 2, 2026

Organization

Navigant Consulting Inc.

Contact

Laura Vogel

Authors

Laura Vogel

Navigant Consulting Inc.

Karin Corfee

Navigant Consulting Inc.

Peter Asmus

Navigant Consulting Inc.

Sarah Bilbao

Navigant Consulting Inc.

Kathryn Collins

Navigant Consulting Inc.
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