香港六和开奖历史记录

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Louisiana has been awarded a $156 million grant to deploy solar energy to homes and apartment buildings across the state, delivering a boost to renewables and an ongoing effort to create solar-powered hubs that can help residents when a hurricane knocks out the power grid.

The state Department of Energy and Natural Resources hailed the award Monday as a win for efforts to make the state more resilient in the face of hurricanes.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency selected Louisiana and 59 other grantees across the country as it handed out $7 billion in total awards. The money comes from the federal Inflation Reduction Act championed by President Joe Biden and opposed by Louisiana鈥檚 Republicans in Congress.

The award comes as environmental advocates have raised concerns about Gov. Jeff Landry鈥檚 position on environmental initiatives. Landry, a Republican and a skeptic of the scientific consensus around climate change, has floated a dramatic reorganization of energy and coastal offices and tapped former oil lobbyist Tyler Gray as head of the rebranded Department of Energy and Natural Resources. Before Landry took office in January, the agency was called the Department of Natural Resources.

It was Gray who enthusiastically announced the news Monday. In a statement, Gray said that Louisiana is 鈥渦niquely positioned to benefit from this federal investment,鈥 given the state鈥檚 population is concentrated in areas at high risk from hurricanes that have knocked out power to huge swaths of people in recent years.

It was former Gov. John Bel Edwards鈥 administration that originally applied for the funding, telling the federal government in a grant application in October that it would 鈥渟ignificantly expand鈥 solar installations in the state and help low-income and disadvantaged communities benefit from the technology.

Edwards鈥 administration highlighted Louisiana鈥檚 particular vulnerability to climate change, which has exacerbated power disruptions.

Patrick Courreges, spokesperson for the DENR, said the state applied for $250 million in funding and was awarded $156 million. He said it was too early to say exactly when and how people will be able to tap into the money.听

Monika Gerhart, executive director of Gulf States Renewable Energy Industries Association, suggested the grant would help to "close the funding gap for more than 20,000 rooftop systems." That, in turn, will create a "a significant number of well-paying jobs," she added, noting that a typical solar installer in Louisiana earns about $55,000 annually.

The DENR said in a news release that the program, called 鈥淪olar for Y鈥檃ll,鈥 will help low-income people get solar panels on homes and apartments by upgrading homes to make them suitable for panels. The money will also go to create low-cost financing for solar, creating 鈥渆quitable loan鈥 programs for community resilience hubs, which are solar-powered centers that are designed to keep power when the grid goes down, among other things.

Gray also signaled to industrial facilities that the program won鈥檛 interfere with existing plants that need uninterrupted power, saying the initiative will 鈥渆nhance safety for our workforce both within and beyond the fence line, ensuring reliable and resilient energy supply.鈥

EPA Administrator Michael Regan said the $7 billion in new grants will reach 900,000 American households.

鈥淭he selectees will advance solar energy initiatives across the country, creating hundreds of thousands of good-paying jobs, saving $8 billion in energy costs for families, delivering cleaner air, and combating climate change,鈥 he said in a statement.

Investigative reporting is more essential than ever, which is why we鈥檝e established the听Louisiana Investigative Journalism Fund,听a non-profit supported by our readers.

To learn more,听.