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Earth United States

EPA Outlines $27 Billion 'Green Bank' for Clean Energy Projects (apnews.com) 33

The Biden administration has outlined how states and nonprofit groups can apply for $27 billion in funding from a "green bank" that will provide low-cost financing for projects intended to cut planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions. From a report: The so-called Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, created by Congress in the landmark climate law approved last year, will invest in clean energy projects nationwide, with a focus on low-income and disadvantaged communities. The Environmental Protection Agency expects to award $20 billion in competitive grants to as many 15 nonprofit groups that will work with local banks and other financial institutions to invest in projects that reduce pollution and lower energy costs for families.

Another $7 billion will be awarded to states, tribes and municipalities to deploy a range of solar energy projects, including residential rooftop solar, community solar and solar storage. EPA Administrator Michael Regan said the green bank -- modeled after similar banks established in states such as Connecticut, New York and California -- will unlock billions of dollars in private investment to enable neighborhoods and communities "that have never participated in the clean-energy economy to participate in full force" in creating green jobs.

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EPA Outlines $27 Billion 'Green Bank' for Clean Energy Projects

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  • At last, Biden said the words "Elon" and "Tesla".

    Fuck GM, Ford and the others legacy car brands for taking the spotlight despite their mediocrity and lack of action.

    • Fuck GM, Ford and the others legacy car brands for taking the spotlight despite their mediocrity and lack of action.

      Teslas are absolutely mediocre. They are now having battery fires which are not the result of a collision, for example, and their fit and finish (both panel gaps and paint) are still inferior to any other significant automaker. Tesla did take action on EVs, so I don't want to take that away, but the other thing you said isn't warranted.

    • or much of any of their tech. There's a reason why Elmo talks down patents, he doesn't have any. Tesla's not an innovator, they're a welfare mom. They made their money off a gov't program that paid them to build EVs so that GM & Ford didn't have to spend more money on making zero emission cars that had high horsepower. They make what are called "compliance cars".

      If anything Tesla has retarded EV development by keeping it in the realm of luxury cars. Without Tesla's use of that carbon credit subsidy
  • by sinij ( 911942 ) on Thursday February 16, 2023 @10:49AM (#63298363)
    I have a plan to fly 1 ton of CO2 to the sun, completely removing it from the atmosphere at the cost of $25B. Can I apply?
    • Probably. Seems like a slush fund for Democrat donors and other climate fraudsters. Solyndra only better!

      • by HBPiper ( 472715 )

        Exactly. Solyndra 2.0

        • > Exactly. Solyndra 2.0

          Good. The DOE program that funded Solyndra ended up making money for the federal government overall, and despite that one high profile defaulted loan, has helped hundreds of other businesses and infrastructure projects get off the ground and we are reaping the benefits of that today.

          If the cost is one Solyndra type debacle every now and then, we should increase our spending on similar programs tenfold because it's got an amazing return for the money.
          =Smidge=

          • The dirty little secret is most government spending actually ends up as increased domestic economic output, output that actually turns a "profit" against the money spent on the program itself.

            The issue is we don't tax that generated output as efficently as we should be.

            • True, but in this case, because a portion of the money "spent" was in the form of business loans, those loans were repaid with interest. Actual profit, not "increased tax revenue down the road" profit.

              Increased tax revenue as well, of course.
              =Smidge=

          • Yes lining the pockets of a few donors is okay as long as the percentage of graft and corruption stays below a certain level. Much better than just letting the private sector handle it by themselves.

            • > Much better than just letting the private sector handle it by themselves.

              This is a very roundabout way of saying you have no fucking clue what the program was or how it worked. Typical.
              =Smidge=

      • Since you are going to be political, this pales in comparision to the Republican slush fund of PPP, as well as the Republican tax giveaway. Democrats I guess are just learning Republicans are fully committed to fascist like economic controls and oligarchy, and just joining the party.
  • ESG 2.0 (Score:3, Insightful)

    by CEC-P ( 10248912 ) on Thursday February 16, 2023 @11:36AM (#63298475)
    And I bet all the carbon credits and offsets and audits will be 100% accurate and this TOTALLY won't have anything to do with pronouns and diversity quotes and other assorted bullshit. Nope, they're TOTALLY not doing that this time.
  • Solyndra should apply for another loan.

    • by rbrander ( 73222 )

      Sigh. Guess I have to repost this every few years. Last time was December 2020:
      https://slashdot.org/comments.... [slashdot.org] ...alas Krugman was not only right about what's below, but about the fact that certain right-wing tropes are "zombies" that keep coming back no matter how many times you kill them. See you all in 2026.

      New York Times, 2014/11/17:

      "Here’s another: Remember Solyndra? It was a renewable-energy firm that borrowed money using Department of Energy guarantees, then went bust, costing the Treasur

  • More money for their buddies. In the end, the result will be zero or negative. Still wondering why your taxes and inflation are both high?

  • What is needed is for us to restart our nuclear power plants building. There is plenty of $ for on-shore wind (i.e. no more subsidies) and we need to limit solar subsidies to building and parking lots.
    This should be used for geothermal electricity, along with nuclear power plants.
  • Buffet can do whatever he wants to with his money. Its his money. It also took the DOE 3 years to make that Solyndra writeoff back, but that's not counting every other questionable grant they've made, is it.

Mediocrity finds safety in standardization. -- Frederick Crane

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