Last week, the Biden administration announced a big boost for the country’s burgeoning electric vehicle charging network. The U.S. Department of Transportation picked 47 EV charging projects to receive nearly $623 million in funding under the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure law.
The projects include a $15 million network of chargers across Maine, $51.5 million for alternative fuel corridors in Puerto Rico, and a $67.8 million for electric truck and other chargers in New Mexico.
The funding is a much-needed stimulus for the U.S. charging network, which remains spotty in much of the country. So far only New York and Ohio have opened charging stations using bipartisan infrastructure law funding, and a handful of other states have broken ground on their EV projects, the Associated Press reports. As of last January, there were only about 20,000 publicly accessible, high-speed Level 3 chargers across the country.
But by 2050, the National Renewable Energy Lab estimates the country will have another 40 million EVs on the road. That means we’ll need at least 182,000 Level 3 chargers across the country by 2050 to accommodate them — and a lot more private and government funding to get them all built.
📉 Power emissions fall: 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 and a decline in coal use. (Canary Media)
🥶 Gas’ winter worries: An environmental group’s new report warns about the vulnerability of gas plants during extreme temperatures and cautions against the “vicious cycle” of investing in new gas-fired resources. (Utility Dive)
🌪️ Billion-dollar climate disasters: The U.S. saw a record number of billion-dollar disasters last year, facing 28 instances of intense flooding, tornadoes, and other severe weather. (Yale Climate Connections)
💰 Utilities’ roundabout influence: An investigation finds power companies have courted and at times co-opted more than two dozen Black civil rights leaders in the Southeast to help divert attention from environmental harms related to fossil fuel plants. (Capital B/Floodlight)
📹 Subscribing to climate denial: YouTube creators that have long pushed climate skepticism now seek to discredit renewable energy and other climate solutions. (CNBC)
😶🌫️ Cooking with gas? Testing reveals gas stoves release hazardous levels of pollutants that can be harmful to vulnerable populations, but protective measures can reduce those risks. (Washington Post)
🏠 Clean energy’s equity shortcoming: Low-income households could benefit most from clean energy upgrades such as heat pumps and solar panels but often don’t have access to financing or government incentives to afford them. (New York Times)
⛰️ A coal-to-solar solution: An energy company’s plan to build a solar farm on a mountaintop removal mine site in Kentucky could become a model to repurpose environmentally disturbed sites in Appalachia for renewables. (Daily Yonder)