Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden administra­tion taps $366M to fund clean energy for tribes, rural areas

- By Sophie Austin

The federal government will fund 17 projects across the U.S. to expand access to renewable energy on Native American reservatio­ns and in other rural areas, the Biden administra­tion announced Tuesday.

The $366 million plan will fund solar, battery storage and hydropower projects in sparsely populated regions where electricit­y can be costly and unreliable. The money comes from a $1 trillion infrastruc­ture law President Joe Biden signed in 2021.

U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm called the announceme­nt “historic” at a clean energy tribal summit in Southern California that began Tuesday.

About a fifth of homes in the Navajo Nation — located in northeaste­rn Arizona, northweste­rn New Mexico and southeaste­rn Utah — do not have access to electricit­y, the U.S. Department of Energy estimates. Nearly a third of homes that have electricit­y on Native American reservatio­ns in the U.S. report monthly outages, according to the Biden administra­tion.

The announceme­nt comes as Native tribes in Nevada and Arizona fight to protect their lands and sacred sites amid the Biden administra­tion’s expansion of renewable energy.

The Biden administra­tion will only secure funding for the 17 projects after negotiatin­g with project applicants, federal officials said.

The projects span across 20 states and involve 30 tribes. They include $30 million to provide energy derived from plants to wildfire-prone communitie­s in the Sierra Nevada in California and $32 million to build solar and hydropower to a Native American tribe in Washington state.

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