Solar Energy Business Association of New England
Unable to pass mandates for electric cars, the state House of Representatives approved substitute steps Wednesday night in a high-priority bill on climate change that provides incentives for alternative energy like solar power and electric heat pumps.
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In an April 30 letter penned to ISO New England President and CEO Gordon van Welie, Markey joined with three of his Senate colleagues in a call for additional refinements to the grid operator’s governance and transparency policies...
Low-income solar programs offer residents, including renters, the opportunity to support solar energy growth in the state as Massachusetts pushes toward ambitious climate goals — in theory.
On May 1, 2024, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Solar Energy Technologies Office (SETO) announced the 2024 Photovoltaics Research and Development (PVRD) funding opportunity, which will award up to $20 million for innovative solar photovoltaics (PV) research...
The Department of Public Utilities is considering several proposals to spread the cost of substation upgrades, and until it decides on them no solar projects larger than 15 kilowatts can move forward in one part of the state.
Thousands of low-income families may soon see a reduction on their energy bill. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) awarded Connecticut $62.5 million from the federal Solar for All program to expand solar power access in low-income communities.
2023 was a year of fragmentation for the residential solar financing market.
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Massachusetts’ Solar for All program could result in a 20% reduction in energy costs to 31,000 low-income and disadvantaged households, support 2,800 clean energy jobs, and decrease annual carbon emissions by 70,000 tons.
First Solar, Qcells, and other domestic solar-panel makers are petitioning the Commerce Department for new tariffs on panels imported from Southeast Asia.
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As part of the bid by the Biden administration to fight climate disruption, the Environmental Protection Agency recently awarded $20 billion to help finance clean energy projects across the United States
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