The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is set to invest $2.2 billion in the nation’s grid for eight projects across 18 states, with the aim of protecting the infrastructure against extreme weather threats, lower costs for communities and catalyze additional grid capacity to meet load growth.
Funded by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law’s Grid Resilience and Innovation Partnerships Program, the selected projects are slated to deploy upgrades to the existing grid that would add 13 GW of grid capacity.
“The first half of 2024 has already broken records for the hottest days in Earth’s history, and as extreme weather continues to hit every part of the country, we must act with urgency to strengthen our aging grid to protect American communities,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm.
“The Biden-Harris Administration is investing in the most crucial component of the nation’s infrastructure, expanding and hardening the grid to allow more resilient, clean power to reach more households and support the ongoing manufacturing boom, all while creating thousands of local jobs.”
In addition to the Grid Innovation Program, the partnership program provides funding to the private sector to strengthen and modernize the domestic power grid against wildfires, extreme weather, and other disruptive events that are exacerbated by the effects of climate change.
There is a particular focus on grid hardening efforts and Smart Grid Grants fund technology investments that will increase how much power the grid can handle, prevent faults that may lead to wildfires or other system disturbances, integrate more renewable energy and facilitate the integration of electrified vehicles, buildings and other devices.
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Renewable Energy
Is School a Jail Sentence?
We’ve all heard ideas like the one being expressed here, though this one sounds extreme. Jail sentence? Education is exclusively an exercise in pounding in bad habits?
What’s the outcome for students in the very worst of our schools that make no attempt whatsoever to help its pupils learn to think critically? Well, their kids learn to:
- Read and write
- Do math, at least through algebra
- Understand some level of history and geography
- Make friends and get along with others
- Establish independence from the parents
- Gain the qualifications for employment
What’s the alternative? Illiteracy? Social isolation? Child labor? Poverty? Neurotic sloth? Being a burden on society?
Is it a coincidence that the countries with the best educated children are the happiest, sanest and most productive nations on the planet?
Renewable Energy
Saying Goodbye to All of America’s Top Women
If you’re a competent woman working at the highest echelon in the U.S. government, better start packing your bags.
Renewable Energy
How Much Further Does the Trust of the American People Extend?
Today we had another “assassination attempt.”
Is it the fourth or the fifth? I lost track after his ear grew back.
Eventually, after perhaps 20 or 30, even the most dimwitted American will recognize that he’s been played.
Trump is a man of God like I’m a bald eagle.
How Much Further Does the Trust of the American People Extend?
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