US DOE Awards Over USD 31 Million to 12 Local Governments and Tribes for Energy Projects
Under DOE’s new Local Government Energy Program, C-SITE supports the implementation of high-impact clean energy projects in disadvantaged communities, energy communities, and small- and medium-sized jurisdictions.
September 10, 2024. By Abha Rustagi
In support of the Biden- Harris Administration's Investing in America agenda, the US Department of Energy (DOE) has announced that it has selected 12 local governments and tribes to receive over USD 31 million in funding through the Communities Sparking Investments in Transformative Energy (C-SITE) funding opportunity.
Under DOE’s new Local Government Energy Program, C-SITE supports the implementation of high-impact clean energy projects in disadvantaged communities, energy communities, and small- and medium-sized jurisdictions.
“The Biden-Harris Administration is committed to ensuring that every community in the country is able to take advantage of the benefits of the clean energy economy,” said US Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm.
“By investing in energy projects in smaller, disadvantaged, and energy transition communities, these grants will reduce energy costs, increase resilience and create jobs and economic opportunity in places that have historically been left behind by federal programs,” added Granholm.
“The James A. Henry building was already going to operate as a health clinic and early childhood education center for the people of the Westside, and now it will also be an energy efficient resilience hub. This grant was only possible because of our Climate Action Plan and the hard work of the Chattanooga Housing Authority," said Chattanooga, Tennessee Mayor Tim Kelly.
C-SITE was launched to fund projects that spark additional investments in communities and deliver direct benefits to workers and residents, such as workforce agreements and protections, reduced energy costs, improved air quality, and improved quality of life. Selected communities are investing in a variety of clean energy approaches and technology areas including building efficiency and electrification, clean transportation, energy infrastructure upgrades, microgrid development and deployment, renewable energy, and workforce development.
In addition to grant funding, selected recipients will receive technical assistance to support project implementation. Notably, selectees will be able to receive a Community Energy Fellow, a DOE-sponsored clean energy professional that will be located in the host community for 18 months to help build capacity and support project outcomes.
This first round of 12 selectees will engage over 32 different partners ranging from housing organizations, workforce training centers, and community-based non-profits. The projects selected demonstrate a range of benefits that could be models for other communities including: Transforming liabilities into assets, modeling new approaches, reducing operational costs and building resilience, funding workforce opportunities, and sparking investments.
please contact: contact@energetica-india.net.