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Buckle up; the Clean Energy Generation is driving major change right here in the Southeast with the push to electrify our region’s school buses.

Studies show that children riding inside traditional diesel school buses are exposed to up to four times the level of diesel exhaust as someone riding in a car ahead of the bus. The health implications include increased risk for asthma and viral illnesses, damage to children’s and teens’ lung growth, and even impaired learning at school, with lower test scores and more behavioral incidents. Diesel bus emissions add to the air pollution levels in the community as well, affecting everyone’s health.

In 2022, the EPA’s Clean School Bus Program began to provide $5 billion over five years (FY 2022-2026) to replace existing school buses with cleaner, healthier zero-emission and low-emission models. The initial funding opportunity was for $500 million, however, due to overwhelming demand for the program, the EPA nearly doubled its funding for the rebates. In the program’s first year, the EPA awarded up to $965 million to fund school bus replacements at nearly 400 schools.

School districts in the Southeast are jumping on board. In total during the first year of the EPA program, Southern states were awarded $163,215,000. South Carolina and Georgia were the third and sixth, respectively, highest-awarded states in the country.

Now that electric school buses are rolling into our communities, here are just a handful of news stories from recent months showing how schools in the Southeast are charging ahead.

Middle photo of Proterra assembly plant in Greenville, S.C, courtesy of Proterra

The push to electrify the nation’s school buses

Almost 500,000 school buses in the U.S. move roughly 25 million schoolchildren an estimated 4 million miles a year. 90% of them run on diesel, releasing 5 million tons of carbon emissions into our communities. But all that’s starting to change, thanks in part to a $5 billion investment through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. School bus maker Blue Bird is playing an important role in electrifying our nation’s transportation sector from their Georgia location, as shown in this segment from CBS Saturday Morning. Watch more.

South Carolina emerges as a leader in electric school buses

South Carolina is embracing electric school buses faster than many states in the U.S. The state aims to run 500 clean, electric school buses by 2027. Federal legislation like the Inflation Reduction Act and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act financially aid the transition to electric school buses nationwide. South Carolina is leveraging the cost savings of this clean transportation for kids. Read more.

Two metro Atlanta school systems to receive electric buses

Atlanta Public Schools were awarded $9.9 million in federal investments for electric school buses. The new electric buses will reduce the current fleet’s carbon emissions and improve the health of the students riding them. SACE’s Climate Advocacy Coordinator, Cary Ritzler, shared, “A diesel bus will be emitting fumes as it drives through the neighborhood outside of the bus, and also fumes that come inside of the bus and expose children inside, on the bus, up to four times the amount that a regular vehicle would. An electric vehicle will have none of those emissions.” Read more.

Miami-Dade adds 20 new electric school buses to fleet ahead of new school year

Miami-Dade County Public School students are heading back-to-school in electric style. The Florida school district recently added 20 electric buses and seven electric vans to their fleet of 1,000. This project was the brainchild of 6th grader Holly Thorpe, who completed a science project measuring the pollution caused by traditional diesel-fueled engines on buses. Read more.

Durham’s Maureen Joy Charter School makes history with fleet of all electric buses

The Maureen Joy Charter School in Durham, North Carolina purchased four electric buses, with plans to add four more next year. “The amount of money we were spending on diesel, it was just this pit of money that we couldn’t spend. We want to spend it on our children and not fixing some transportation,” said a Maureen Joy representative. Read more.

Queen City school buses are going electric

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools is rolling into the new year in electric style. The North Carolina school district is taking its first steps towards school bus electrification by adding three electric school buses and three chargers to its fleet using funds from the state’s Volkswagen Settlement. Home to North Carolina’s largest school bus fleet and the nation’s 10th largest school bus fleet, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools transports 105,000 students each day. Read more.

Follow along each week

These stories highlight just a few of the positive things happening in our area! Every day we see signs of hope. The Clean Energy Generation is creating a future powered by clean energy that leads to clean air and water, good jobs, and vibrant communities.

Would you like to see more stories like this? We’ve got just the thing for you! Every Thursday, we share the latest clean energy news on Instagram with #CleanEnergyNews. Join us as we celebrate the progress and signs of hope in the clean energy transition.

Join the Clean Energy Generation

Together, all of us who are taking action are part of the Clean Energy Generation movement. We’re coming together to create healthier communities and a more secure and sustainable environment, starting now. No matter your age, income, zip code, or abilities, you can play a role. You don’t have to have the answers, learning more is a great way to start. Join us, and we’ll share ideas, resources, tools, and practices to show how we can all be part of the transformation.

Join the Clean Energy Generation

The post Green is the New Yellow: Electric School Buses are Rolling into the Southeast appeared first on SACE | Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.

Green is the New Yellow: Electric School Buses are Rolling into the Southeast

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Renewable Energy

Losing My Religion

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Some may find the claim at left compelling.

But consider Japan, China, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Finland that are almost completely atheist.  The other nations in Western Europe have also steadily moved away from religion.

Have they “lost their countries,” or is this a present-day scare tactic directed by fear-mongers, just as it has been since the Dark Ages?

Losing My Religion

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Renewable Energy

Is It Odd that Many Words in English are Supernumerary? Or Is that Superfluous? Extraneous? Unnecessary?

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Not at all.

English has an uncountable thousands of words it doesn’t need.  If you don’t believe me, check out “A Word a Day,” and learn the meanings of words that are completely useless.  The last two days brought us:

  • April 14: Flocculent (adjective: having a fluffy, woolly texture).
  • April 13: Impetrate (verb: to obtain by request or entreaty).

Maybe this impressed people a century ago, but if I wrote that a sheep was flocculent, I think you’d be rolling your eyes.

While some English speakers 400 years ago were discovering gravity, developing calculus, using newly minted telescopes to explore our solar system, and refining our understanding of logic as originally put forth by Aristotle, others were inventing words for groups of animals.

Sure, it’s useful to have words like “pack” (for dogs), “herd” (for cows and horses), “flock” (for birds), and perhaps a few others.  But what about a group of owls (a parliament), flamingos (a flamboyance), or ferrets (a business)?  And that’s just the beginning.

By contrast, Spanish has too few words, IMO.  For those interested, here are the 15+ possible meanings in English of the verb “llevar.” As someone who made an honest attempt to learn the language, I’d go into panic mode when someone would say something with any conjugation of that verb.  S***! Is he talking about wearing something, Giving someone a ride? Bringing something? Getting along well with someone?  Stealing something?

Is It Odd that Many Words in English are Supernumerary? Or Is that Superfluous? Extraneous? Unnecessary?

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Renewable Energy

The Universe Doesn’t Care About Us

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If you believe that a loving God has a plan for you, and is steadily guiding you towards happiness, then you disagree with the assertion here.

The rest of us are forced to admit that the universe is cooly indifferent to us and the outcome of our lives here on Earth.

This doesn’t mean, btw, that our lives are meaningless, but it does compel us to create our own meaning as we make our choices as we go along.

Another point to be made here is that there is no “galactic cavalry” that is going to come charging in, guns ablazing, to save us from the criminal insanity of the Trump administration.

The Universe Doesn’t Care About Us

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