Latest News

US grants $428 million to tidy energy projects in neighborhoods that depend on coal

The U.S. on Tuesday announced $428 million in grants to develop or broaden battery making and recycling plants and other clean energy manufacturing in neighborhoods that have been struck hard by recent closures of coal mines and power plants.

WHY IT is very important

The administration of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic prospect in the Nov. 5 election, has actually vowed to support communities that are having a hard time as the nation decreases the burning of coal to generate power in an effort to suppress environment modification. A lot of the tasks remain in states that have leaned Republican in recent elections or are battleground states.

CRUCIAL QUOTE

These are neighborhoods that powered America for literally decades, and this administration, the Biden-Harris administration, thinks they're precisely the right folks in the right neighborhoods to lead the tidy energy shift for decades to come, Deputy U.S. Energy Secretary David Turk informed reporters in a call.

BY THE NUMBERS

The 14 tasks cover 12 states including, Kentucky, Utah, West Virginia, Texas and Pennsylvania. Turk said the grants, funded by the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure law, will generate about another $500 million from the economic sector and produce more than 1,900 high paying tasks.

PROJECT EXAMPLES

One job in Coraopolis, Pennsylvania will get more than $ 87 million to Mainspring energy for the production of 1,000 direct generators each year. The innovation, created to support utilities, information centers and micro-grids, can generate power from burning natural gas, hydrogen and biogas, or gas produced from animals manure.

Another task called Sparkz Inc in Bridgeport, West Virginia got $9.8 million to develop the first-of-its-kind battery-grade iron phosphate plant in the United States.

(source: Reuters)