Moapa Band of Paiute Indians
The Moapa Band of Paiute Indians of the Moapa River Indian Reservation are a federally recognized tribe of Southern Paiute, who live in southern Nevada on the Moapa River Indian Reservation.
Name
In the past, the Moapa Paiute have been called Muappa or Moapat and the Nuwuvi.Art and material culture
The Moapa are adept at basketry. They traditionally wore clothing made of hide, yucca fibers, and cliff-rose bark cloth.History
Southern Paiute practiced irrigation horticulture before contact with Europeans. The Moapa traded with the Spanish in the later 18th and early 19th centuries who arrived here from California and Arizona, yet no missions were built in the area.In 1869 the United States relocated by force the Southern Paiute to the Moapa area. Originally the entire Moapa River watershed and lands along the Colorado River was assigned to the Moapa; however, in 1875 their reservation was reduced to.
They later suffered from decimation by disease in the 1920s and 1930s.
In 1941, they organized with a formal constitution. In 1980 the Moapa River reservation was expanded, with about added. People on the reservation continue to suffer high rates of unemployment, and diabetes, resulting in some of the Moapa migrating to other parts of the country to find work.
Reservation
The Moapa River Indian Reservation is located near Moapa Town, Nevada. Moapa River Indian Reservation consists of 71,954 acres. As of the census of 2010, the population was 238, up from 206 in 2000.Energy
The reservation includes a 250 MW solar power generation facility known as Moapa Southern Paiute Solar Project which generates enough energy to power 111,000 homes, displacing around 341,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide annually. Another solar farm Eagle [Shadow Mountain Solar Farm] is being constructed in the reservation is a planned 300 MW solar project.In 2019, Paiutes agreed with Berkshire Hathaway's NV Energy about two solar and battery projects:
8minutenergy Renewables develops the Southern Bighorn Solar & Storage Center with a 300 MWac solar array and 540 MWh storage.
EDF Renouvelables constructs the Arrow Canyon Solar Project with 200 MWac solar array and 375 MWh storage, operational by 2023.