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New programs unveiled today in a historic announcement will help make solar energy more accessible for people with low income and in disadvantaged communities throughout the Southeast. The Solar For All program, run by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), announced awardees today, making available more than $750 million across the Southeast states of Georgia, North Carolina, Florida, Tennessee, and South Carolina. The grants are part of the $7 billion being awarded today nationally. Solar For All is a brand new program, created by Congress and President Biden as part of the Inflation Reduction Act.

The funds will enable thousands of households with low incomes and in disadvantaged communities in each state to be powered by solar, reducing their bills by hundreds of dollars each year and lightening the environmental footprint of energy consumption. Some households that participate in the program will also benefit with housing upgrades associated with solar, since up to 20% of the funds can be spent on “enabling upgrades” such as electrical system upgrades, structural building repairs and energy efficiency.

Solar for All will help low-income households nationwide, but the $750+ million awarded to the Southeast will be particularly impactful. This region has some of the least affordable energy bills in the entire country. Affordable solar can not only empower homes, it can reconcile historic inequities. 

Here are the awards in our region:

  • Georgia: $156,010,000 to the Capital Good Fund (more info here)
  • North Carolina: $156,120,00 to NC Department of Environmental Quality (program summary here)
  • Florida: $156,120,000 to SELF (Solar and Energy Loan Fund) (program summary here)
  • Tennessee: $156,120,000 to TN Department of Environment and Conservation (program summary here)

Additionally, $156,120,000 was awarded to Groundswell to run a Southeast regional program that extends more broadly than SACE’s five-state focus area, and hundreds of millions of dollars were awarded to other multistate and multitribe initiatives that may fund projects in the Southeast.

These awards come after a competitive application process in which applications were submitted last fall. Today’s announcement marks the selection of awards from the federal government to state and regional level programs, but it will still take some time before residents will be able to apply to participate in the programs. EPA anticipates beginning to distribute funding to the state and regional program administrators starting in June, and many awardees will take a year to refine the plans for their programs. Resident and community involvement in those planning processes will be critical in helping ensure the success of the programs. All funds from the program will be spent over the next five years.

Solar energy can lower people’s bills, improve the reliability of the electric grid, and help solve the climate crisis. The Solar For All grants announced today will help deliver these benefits to families and households who would otherwise have limited ability to take advantage of solar. SACE applauds the federal government and the awardees announced today for facilitating this historic program, and is excited to see people in the Southeast start to benefit.

The post Historic Announcement Advances Solar For Tens of Thousands of Households with Low Incomes appeared first on SACE | Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.

Historic Announcement Advances Solar For Tens of Thousands of Households with Low Incomes

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Renewable Energy

Australia’s $17B Grid Expansion, Recycling Blades to Steel

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Weather Guard Lightning Tech

Australia’s $17B Grid Expansion, Recycling Blades to Steel

Allen covers Suzlon hitting 2 GW in a single Indian state, Nabrawind’s crane-free turbine install in Namibia, Antora’s South Dakota thermal battery, Australia’s $17 billion grid expansion, and Shimizu recycling old turbine blades into steel.

Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly email update on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on FacebookYouTubeTwitterLinkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary Barnes’ YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us!

GOOD MORNING.

The wind industry is not just getting bigger.

It is getting smarter.

And today … we have the proof.

Let us start in India.

SUZLON GROUP just crossed a milestone.

Two gigawatts of wind orders … in a single Indian state.

The latest deal … sixty-five turbines at three megawatts each

for a company called SUNSURE ENERGY.

SUNSURE is not a utility.

It is an independent power producer

building round-the-clock clean energy

for data centers … electric vehicles … and heavy industry.

Wind paired with solar and battery storage.

Power that does not stop when the sun goes down.

SUZLON is already building six hundred and sixty-four megawatts

of additional commercial and industrial projects in the same region.

And SUNSURE … backed by PARTNERS GROUP of Switzerland …

has seven gigawatts in development across India

with a target of ten gigawatts by two thousand thirty.

That is not government-led.

That is private capital chasing wind.

Now … across the ocean to Africa.

A Spanish company called NABRAWIND [NAH-brah-wind]

just solved a problem that has plagued remote wind farms for years.

How do you install a turbine

when you cannot get a crane to the site?

Their answer is a system called SKYLIFT.

No heavy-lift cranes. None.

A self-erecting tower combined with a blade installation tool

they call the BLADERUNNER.

They just put up a GOLDWIND six-megawatt turbine

at a wind farm in NAMIBIA.

And here is the part that changes the math.

Traditional crane installation needs calm air.

Six to eight meters per second. Maximum.

NABRAWIND’s system works in fifteen meters per second sustained …

with gusts up to twenty.

That site blows hard. All the time.

Which is exactly why they chose it.

When complete … seven turbines …

two hundred and thirty gigawatt-hours a year.

About six percent of NAMIBIA’s entire electricity demand.

NABRAWIND was acquired by Australia’s FORTESCUE last year

as part of its industrial decarbonization push.

So India is stacking private-sector wind orders.

Africa is installing turbines without cranes.

And in SOUTH DAKOTA …

they are storing the wind itself.

A California startup called ANTORA ENERGY

just built a five-gigawatt-hour thermal battery

at an ethanol plant in BIG STONE CITY.

More than two hundred solid carbon blocks.

When the wind blows at night and nobody needs the power …

the blocks absorb cheap electricity and heat up.

When the plant needs energy …

the blocks release heat or generate electricity

through special cells that capture light

from superheated material.

Think of it as a giant toaster oven battery.

Full power expected by October.

The plant’s president put it simply.

Nobody has got a switch for the wind.

It blows when it wants to blow.

Now … down under.

The AUSTRALIAN government just announced

the biggest single expansion of its electricity grid.

Nineteen renewable energy projects.

Seven-point-eight gigawatts of generation.

Seven-point-nine gigawatt-hours of battery storage.

Seventeen billion dollars in private investment.

Nineteen thousand construction jobs.

Power for four million homes.

Among the largest … RWE’s [arr-vay’s] THEODORE wind farm in QUEENSLAND.

One-point-one gigawatts. Up to one hundred and seventy turbines.

Three billion Australian dollars.

RWE … the same company building offshore wind

in England and Denmark …

is now building onshore in AUSTRALIA.

And the AUSTRALIAN government is not stopping.

They just opened the next round of tenders.

Another five gigawatts.

Finally … JAPAN.

Major contractor SHIMIZU [shee-MEE-zoo] CORPORATION

has developed a way to recycle old wind turbine blades.

Not into park benches. Not into landfill.

Into steel.

The blades are cut and crushed into a material

that goes into electric furnaces

to adjust the carbon content of steel …

making it harder and stronger.

JAPAN expects to replace one hundred to two hundred turbines a year

by the two thousand thirties.

That is two to three thousand tonnes of blade waste. Annually.

SHIMIZU has built about twenty percent

of the wind power facilities in JAPAN.

They see this technology as a way to grow

their entire wind energy business.

So … let us step back.

India stacks two gigawatts of private-sector wind orders.

Africa installs turbines in gale-force winds … without a crane.

South Dakota stores surplus wind in superheated carbon blocks.

Australia backs nineteen projects with seventeen billion dollars.

And Japan turns old blades into stronger steel.

From the factory floor to the scrap yard …

from the wind farm to the furnace …

the industry is solving problems

at every stage of a turbine’s life.

And that’s the state of the wind industry for the 25th of May 2026.

Join us for the UPTIME WIND ENERGY PODCAST tomorrow.

Australia’s $17B Grid Expansion, Recycling Blades to Steel

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Renewable Energy

Is School a Jail Sentence?

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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?

Is School a Jail Sentence?

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Renewable Energy

Saying Goodbye to All of America’s Top Women

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If you’re a competent woman working at the highest echelon in the U.S. government, better start packing your bags.

Saying Goodbye to All of America’s Top Women

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