Skip to content
Saga Energy

Who we serve

Capacity you can defend in a rate case.

Saga partners with electric cooperatives, municipal utilities, and investor-owned utilities to deliver renewable generation that's aligned to your Integrated Resource Plan, honest about interconnection, and sized to the load-serving responsibility you carry.

What we bring to the table

  • Shovel-ready utility-scale solar, solar plus BESS hybrids, and utility-scale wind
  • Distributed BESS right-sized to distribution hosting capacity
  • Interconnection-queue honesty, with timelines grounded in actual study position and defensible under downside scenarios
  • Community-benefit agreements structured to what the county actually wants, so your rate-case testimony holds up

How we work with utility partners

Every utility engagement starts with your IRP. We don't pitch a project that doesn't map to a resource need, because that's a waste of your time and ours. From there, we walk through interconnection posture, offtake structure (PPA, BTA, tolling where it applies), community benefit, construction schedule, and the specific rate-case framing your team will use when the project goes forward.

Cooperatives are core

Electric cooperatives are among our most natural partners. Rural co-ops serve distributed load, face capacity-value challenges that storage genuinely solves, and operate on distribution systems where Saga's smaller-scale offerings match the actual need. We speak co-op, from G&T structure to wholesale power contracts to all-requirements implications, so your staff doesn't have to explain the basics to your developer.

Where we work

Saga works coast to coast. Our deepest relationships are in Colorado and the wider Rocky Mountain region, where we cover Xcel Public Service Company of Colorado, Black Hills Colorado Electric, Tri-State G&T member co-ops, and the Colorado municipal utilities, and where we actively extend into Wyoming, Montana, Utah, New Mexico, and Idaho. Beyond the Rockies, we develop for utility partners in the desert Southwest, the Southeast, the Midwest, and elsewhere where project economics line up.

What we expect from an engagement

  • IRP-alignment in our bidding posture from the outset
  • Interconnection-queue honesty, defensible under downside studies
  • Community-benefit structures that survive rate-case scrutiny
  • A direct line to a Saga partner at every major decision point

Start a utility conversation →