Washington just dropped $41.1 million into clean energy projects across 22 counties. That’s 49 projects, from rooftop solar to battery storage, EV charging, and even “feasibility studies” — because sometimes you have to study your way to a cleaner planet.Â
Regional Grant Winners: $2.75 million for big battery storage in Winthrop, so rural residents won’t have to sit in the dark like it’s 1987. $1.85 million for a CO2 recovery plant at Yakima Chief Hops. Finally, a way to capture all that carbon while brewing your next IPA. $411,000 for a solar array at Easton School District, which might just teach kids that solar panels are cooler than TikTok. $188,500 for brownfield solar at the former Lovitt Mine in Wenatchee. Who says old mines can’t be trendy? $156,300 for rooftop solar and battery backup at Red Barn in Leavenworth — because community resilience deserves a little sparkle. $129,469 for solar and batteries at Vecino Apartments in Yakima, supporting homeless families and young adults with disabilities. $122,580 for rooftop solar at Kittitas County Chamber of Commerce. Even bureaucracies deserve clean energy cred. $52,300 for a microgrid solar project in Methow Valley. Because affordable housing shouldn’t mean “powerless.” Jamie’s Place in Methow Valley — amount TBD, but hey, every bit counts.Â
Commerce Director Joe Nguyá»…n keeps it real: the goal is simple — put money where it matters, cut carbon, and boost equity. Sounds good to us.Â
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The Funding Source: Washington’s Climate Commitment Act (CCA) and How it Works
The CCA is Washington’s version of “cap-and-invest.” Big polluters get a yearly limit on greenhouse gas emissions and have to buy allowances to cover whatever they emit.Â
Allowance Auctions: The Department of Ecology hosts quarterly sales where businesses bid. Think eBay, but for carbon. Trading: Companies can swap allowances to find the cheapest way to comply. Round of Bridge, anyone? Revenue Use: Money raised funds solar, batteries, EV chargers, and other projects. Goal: Slash Washington’s greenhouse gas emissions 95% by 2050. Yes, that’s ambitious. Â
An allowance auction is basically a “pay-to-pollute” marketplace — except instead of buying junk on eBay, you’re buying the right to emit CO2. The silver lining? It funds local clean energy projects and keeps polluters honest.Â
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Why It MattersÂ
The Clean Energy Grant program + CCA = triple win:Â
Shrinks Washington’s carbon footprint. Delivers clean energy where people actually live. Supports jobs, community resilience, and equity.Â
Bottom line: polluters pay, communities benefit. Schools, nonprofits, rural utilities — all getting greener, stronger, and more resilient.Â
For the complete list of the Washington State Department of Commerce Clean Energy Community Grants, go to commerce.wa.gov
Gallery Credit: Kevin Miller
Gallery Credit: Nick Northern
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