Oct. 25, 2006: Four States Award $61 Million for Clean Energy Projects
SACRAMENTO, Calif., LANSING, Mich., HARRISBURG, Pa., and ALBANY, N.Y. - Four states have awarded nearly $61 million over the past month and a half to support clean energy projects. The states include California, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and New York, and the funds are supporting a wide range of energy technologies. On the West Coast, for instance, the California Energy Commission (CEC) loaned $2.2 million to the city of San Diego to make energy efficiency improvements to a variety of municipal buildings and to install five 30-kilowatt solar power systems. The CEC also awarded 10 research grants for nearly $950,000 to advance wind turbines, solar cells, landfill gas systems, building cooling devices, and energy storage systems.
Michigan is known for auto manufacturing, so it is no surprise that when its 21st Century Jobs Fund awarded more than $25 million to clean energy technologies, many of the projects were related to vehicles. The fund is helping to develop technologies for biodiesel production, fuel cells, lithium batteries, ethanol-fueled engines, advanced materials for vehicles, and advanced manufacturing technologies. In addition, about $3 million of the funds will go toward a statewide support network for alternative energy technologies.