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United States Earth Government Power

US Invests $20 Billion More to Finance Clean-Energy Projects (msn.com) 86

Thursday America's Environmental Protection Agency "awarded $20 billion to help finance clean-energy projects across the country," reports the Washington Post. The money comes from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund established by President Biden's signature climate law, the Inflation Reduction Act. The fund seeks to leverage public and private dollars to invest in clean-energy technologies such as solar panels, heat pumps and more.

The program is potentially one of the most consequential — yet least understood — parts of the climate law...

Simply put, the program allows people to access low-interest loans for clean-energy projects that they might not otherwise have received. Imagine a community group that wants to install electric vehicle charging stations at its neighborhood recreation center but can't get a loan from a bank or a lender. As is often the case, potential lenders say they're hesitant to support a novel green technology or a business without a track record of success. Low-income and minority communities have long encountered such obstacles in trying to attract private capital. The program aims to overcome this problem by providing a huge influx of federal cash — $27 billion in total — for nonprofit organizations to dole out to clean-energy projects nationwide. Each nonprofit will serve as a "green bank" that offers more favorable lending rates than commercial banks. "It's just really hard to get banks to bring capital into low-income communities, especially for these new projects that they're not used to financing," said Adrian Deveny, the founder of the firm Climate Vision and the former director of energy and environmental policy for Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), a key architect of the Inflation Reduction Act....

The EPA is awarding money to eight nonprofits, which have committed to leverage nearly $7 in private capital for every $1 of federal investment. The nonprofits have also pledged to ensure that at least 70 percent of the funds will benefit disadvantaged communities, and that the financed projects will reduce up to 40 million metric tons of carbon dioxide a year — equivalent to the annual emissions of nearly 9 million gasoline-powered cars... [The nonprofit] Coalition for Green Capital, will use a $5 billion award to establish a "national green bank," co-founder and CEO Reed Hundt said. "We're going to be able to cause about $100 billion of total additional investment over a seven-year time period with that number, because we can leverage it," Hundt said.

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US Invests $20 Billion More to Finance Clean-Energy Projects

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  • $20 billion? From where? We've been running a $2-3 trillion (or more) deficit for years.. Where the fuck are they getting $20 billion to hand out?
    • $300 trillion? (Score:2, Insightful)

      by kackle ( 910159 )
      A little more from you.

      And me. And most Slashdotters. And all of our progeny for the foreseeable future.

      I've often thought about what the end of all of this spending looks like, way, way in the future. Will people who have our debt be able to take actual states from us? Shipping ports? If so, how? There is no world court to handle this that I understand. Anyone care to speculate?
      • That ain't how macroeconomics works. US congress people have been misleading the public & probably themselves with this fiscal conservatism nonsense for a few decades now. If you doubt this, ask any non-partisan/non-ideological economist.
        • by kackle ( 910159 )
          I don't understand what you mean. Aren't we in significant debt?
          • Yes, but fiscal conservatism is the wrong analytical lens which leads to inappropriate policy decisions to reduce the imbalance. For further information read up on & ask about how macroeconomics actually works.
            • by kackle ( 910159 )
              I guess I'm asking you: Why overspend, ever? It seems like condemning the future is not a good solution if we're not presently in a desperate situation.
              • Again, you're making fiscally conservative assumptions. Macroeconomics isn't like a household budget. It's something very different.
                • by kackle ( 910159 )
                  Since you won't or can't summarize the situation, and I haven't taken a macroeconomics class, I guess I'll just have to take your word that our large debt is irrelevant, even when it confuses, concerns and affects the voting patterns of the ignorant like me.
                  • Don't worry. You're not alone. Apparently, your elected representatives in charge of your economy also don't understand the difference between micro- & macro- economics.

                    I'm assuming the US economy hasn't collapsed because some clever people somewhere are telling those representatives what they want to hear while enacting the best policies they can under the circumstances.

                    Fiscal conservatism has been popular among both US parties for several decades now. See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] It's
                    • by kackle ( 910159 )
                      Is balancing the budget "extremist ideology"? And won't creditors eventually balk after the debt reaches $4 quadrillion?
      • Anyone care to speculate?

        The American military is so incredibly powerful for many reasons, among the most important is forcing adoption of the dollar onto as many other world economies as possible. Right now, 65 fiat currencies are pegged to the dollar, not even counting other currencies and markets that trade in dollars. This way, when the money printer goes “brrrrrrrr” you can print far more money and not suffer inflation because it’s much harder to dilute the entire planet. As a bonus, debt is good because

        • by kackle ( 910159 )
          Interesting, thanks for your reply. By 'redistribution of favors', you mean domestically? Is it possible for foreign countries to eventually unionize and rebel?
          • Interesting, thanks for your reply. By 'redistribution of favors', you mean domestically?

            Historically yes, but the reality now is corporations and political donors are now intertwined with both domestic and foreign influences. Money is being given out as favors, and those favors are in return laundered as donations, often indirectly, to political campaigns and the cycle repeats. Dollars are not a zero sum game, even the value they represent is arcane and nebulous even if it’s backed by physical goods and services.

            Is it possible for foreign countries to eventually unionize and rebel?

            This would be a real concern, so disinformation and other campaigns

            • by kackle ( 910159 )
              So taking that all into account, wouldn't it be "better" to NOT have the games (and the debt)?
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Congress creates money on paper when they approve government spending. We're not on the gold standard anymore grandpa.

    • Wouldn't the bigger question be about, you know, the rest of the two or three trillion, as opposed to a small investment that likely pays for itself very quickly if it loosens up any kind of economic growth whatsoever, as it seems like it would have to at a ratio of 7 private dollars for every public dollar spent?

      • Wouldn't the bigger question be about, you know, the rest of the two or three trillion, as opposed to a small investment that likely pays for itself very quickly if it loosens up any kind of economic growth whatsoever, as it seems like it would have to at a ratio of 7 private dollars for every public dollar spent?

        Sure...If you want to totally ignore the fact that the $20 billion is 100% debt. That's kind of like a person who has a million dollars in credit card debt adding another $20,000 for an "investment".

        We all know the only way to not be broke is to spend less than you take in.. The government should operate no differently. Spend less than revenue and build a fucking emergency fund... Then when shit hits the fan you don't have to dig yourself into a debt hole... Once you've got a solid surplus built up

  • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Saturday April 06, 2024 @07:25PM (#64375714)
    ...widespread fraud & misappropriation of funds has beset the EPA's Clean Energy Finance initiative &...
  • "The nonprofits have also pledged to ensure that at least 70 percent of the funds will benefit disadvantaged communities"

    It shouldn't take long to find a non-profit denied for refusing this pledge or someone rejected by one of the non-profits for failing to meet the criteria. Then the whole thing gets squished under the equal protection clause.

  • "Clean" is not what is normally meant by "clean."

  • For Joe and all his cronies in government and the private sector to abscond/embezzle and launder in empty shell companies,

Heisengberg might have been here.

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