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Biden puts $632 million toward new EV chargers

Jan 11, 2024
Written by
Kathryn Krawczyk
In collaboration with
energynews.us
Biden puts $632 million toward new EV chargers

ELECTRIC VEHICLES: The Biden administration awards $623 million for 47 electric vehicle charging projects across the country, with the money set to fund 7,500 new charging ports. (Associated Press)

ALSO:

EMISSIONS: U.S. power sector emissions dropped 8% in 2023 from the year before, largely thanks to a record number of new solar and utility-scale battery installations. (Canary Media)

CLIMATE:

CLEAN ENERGY: The world’s renewable energy capacity skyrocketed in 2023, growing at its fastest pace in 20 years, the International Energy Agency says. (Guardian)

OIL & GAS:

  • A top oil and gas lobbying group launches an advertising campaign meant to promote U.S. fossil fuel production as “vital” to supplying the world with “cleaner, more reliable energy.” (Guardian)
  • A Republican senator and the head of a small oil and gas company both had assistance from the same oil lobbyist as they testified against the EPA’s proposed methane fee this week, submitting remarks that were almost identical in some spots. (E&E News)
  • The Alaska Indigenous community closest to the Willow drilling project withdraws its opposition to the development on the condition that ConocoPhillips protects subsistence resources. (Northern Journal)

BUILDINGS:

SOLAR:

POLITICS: Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy says long-stalled energy project permitting reform will likely only happen as part of a bipartisan “grand bargain” that would need to include more precise pollutant measurements. (The Hill)

PIPELINES: After failed efforts to change state law, Iowa lawmakers suggest that blocking the use of eminent domain for carbon pipelines may require intervention by the U.S. Supreme Court. (Cedar Rapids Gazette)

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