The plantation closed in 2006; two years later, the community's land was given to the Hawaiian Agriculture Research Center, allowing its residents to keep their leases.
[5] In March 2019, the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) approved 174 Power Global to build a 52 megawatt with 208 megawatt-hour storage solar farm plus battery storage project on a 352-acre site owned by Robinson Kunia Land LLC at Kunia called Hoʻohana Solar 1.
HECO will buy electricity from this solar-plus-storage project at 10 cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh).
[6][7] According to PUC filings, FCHQC Development, a joint venture between Forest City Sustainable Resources and 174 Power Group, owns 174 Power Group and has Larry Greene as the project manager of Hoʻohana Solar 1.
This article about a property in Hawaii on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.