Despite pandemic Pine Ridge solar project progresses

Lynn Rapp, upon whose land the Lookout Solar Project is being built.

BUFFALO GAP – Lookout Solar Project has experienced some pitfalls from the COVID-19 pandemic, but progress is also being made where available.

The largest pitfall that the project has experienced is the blocking of travel for employees of Wirsol, the project’s German developer. The Rapp family, whose land the Lookout Solar Project is being built on, is in constant contact with the developers despite being separated.

However, bureaucratic items are being wrapped up in order to begin construction shortly. “We are finishing everything that is necessary for the paper work, leases, and BIA approval,” said Lynn Rapp. “It’s just a matter of finishing off some paperwork.”

The most important piece of paper work that the project is looking forward to be completed is the lease which needs to be approved by the BIA. Through the COVID-19 pandemic, the BIA has been operating slower than normal and Rapp has experienced this extensively.

Rapp says that the lease should be back at soon, and when that happens they will “start working with TERO and begin building roads.”

As far as the slowdown in the project goes, Rapp is not too upset. “We understand that things happen at their own time so we aren’t going anywhere,” she said. “We have been at this for years, and we have been through three different tribal administrations. If it takes a little longer than that is what it takes.”

The Lookout Solar Project will eventually cost $100 million and there will be around 500,000 solar panels. It will produce 110 megawatts and will have the option to expand. Expansion, Rapp said, could also involve the use of wind to create energy. The project is aimed to be completed in 2021 and the prospective amount of jobs that it will bring has been a focus.

Rapp said that many people from around the Pine Ridge area have already reached out about possible employment and said that “we appreciate people wanting to know where we are at because these are important jobs and well paid jobs.”

But, with the sheer size of the operation and the abilities of workers, the employment scope may be larger than the Pine Ridge Reservation. “We will need many people with different skills and educations,” said Rapp. “With TERO, we will work with our tribe first, but after that we may go regionally and even nationally.”

In order to train as many Pine Ridge and local Native Americans in the proper abilities to qualify for jobs at Lookout Solar Project, Rapp has been working with Henry Red Cloud, owner of Red Cloud Renewable Energy Center. Red Cloud hopes to train nearly 500 tribal members for the installation of between 7,000 – 10,000 solar panels per day for the project.

There will also be jobs added outside of the Lookout Solar Project, but will be a direct impact from the facility. Rapp described it by saying “when you build a site of the dimensions of the site ours are, there will be trickle down business like places to stay, food, and transportation.”

Rapp is also open to the idea of helping other Native Americans or tribes in building their own renewable energy projects. “We know how to do it and we know how to work with international developers,” she said.

But overall, “we need to be proud of the fact that an enterprise of this size can be rural and on a reservation,” she said. “We have had wonderful cooperation from the BIA, local and well as regionally and nationally. People have also been so supportive tribally and in the county as well.”

 

(Contact Travis at travisldewes@gmail.com)

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