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All-Electric Community Coming

Naturally, it’s in California, the projected all-electric community with more than 200 solar powered homes to be constructed by a coalition of strategy, research, technology, and energy providers. This is in response to a report that residential energy use accounts for roughly 20% of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S., contributing to more severe and frequent weather events—between 2013 and 2020, blackouts caused by events such as snowstorms, wildfires, and hurricanes have tripled in duration, claims the latest data from the U.S. EIA (Energy Information Admin.).

SunPower Corp., UCI (University of Calif., Irvine), Schneider Electric, and SCE (Southern California Edison) banded together with KB Home for the homebuilder’s newly launched Energy-Smart Connected Communities Oak Shade and Durango within its popular Shadow Mountain master plan in Menifee, California.

The state-of-the-art, all electric homes will be solar powered, equipped with individual battery storage, and connected to a microgrid powered by a large, shared community battery. These power-outage resistant communities are the first of their kind in the state and are designed to offer a blueprint for sustainable and resilient new home development of the future.

KB Home, SunPower, and UCI joined to reimagine what a new home community could look like if built to reduce carbon emissions, cut energy costs, and provide new ways of producing reliable and resilient energy. With a $6.65 million DOE (Dept. of Energy) grant, microgrid design and engineering support from Schneider Electric, and strong collaboration with SCE to ensure a smooth transition between grid and off-grid electricity, these innovative homes are now available to the public.

Built for Sustainability

All 219 of the homes in the new Durango and Oak Shade communities will be built to meet the DOE’s Zero Energy Ready Home criteria, which include ENERGY STAR, WaterSense, and Indoor airPLUS. These additional features will help homeowners reduce average energy use by up to 40%.

Each home comes with a SunPower Equinox solar system designed to achieve net-zero energy, a 13kWh SunVault Storage battery, high efficiency appliances, flexible loads such as electric heat pump water heaters and HVAC systems, and other smart technologies like Schneider Electric’s Square D Energy Center and Connected Wiring Devices.

Additionally, these new KB homes will offer a set of benefits compared to homes without these features, including:

These communities offer a new concept for how individual homes interact with the electrical grid. Every home, while maintaining its regular service with local utility Southern California Edison, is designed to operate during an outage as part of a self-supporting microgrid, drawing energy from its own SunVault storage system as well as a large community battery. Together, they are designed to support critical loads such as lights, refrigeration, and WiFi as well as additional high-capacity loads like HVAC and domestic hot water. When the sun is shining, individual and community batteries can be continually recharged using excess solar generation until the grid connection returns.

Additional energy services offered by SunPower allow residents to enroll in a VPP (virtual power plant) program through which their battery storage, EV chargers, and other flexible loads will automatically dispatch to support the electric grid. Enrolled homeowners will be eligible for compensation for their participation in the program. UCI will also simulate the connected microgrids, analyze data from the VPP program, and collaborate with SCE to determine its effectiveness in supporting grid infrastructure.

Coalition for the Future

The project encompasses a unique, multi-disciplinary partnership comprised of several organizations:

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