Overview
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Background
One of the greatest obstacles to the United States’ clean energy transition is our outdated electric grid. The grid we know today was largely built in the 1950s and 1960s to support large, centrally located, utility-owned fossil fuel facilities. As a result, renewable energy and transmission projects face a system of local, state, and federal approval processes ill-equipped to equitably and rapidly build out the energy grid.
Purpose
This report offers a suite of recommendations that the Biden administration and state leaders can take now to build clean energy at the pace demanded by the climate crisis—without waiting for climate-denying Republicans in Congress to offer another bad deal.
This paper offers policies to speed up clean energy deployment so that we can take full advantage of the enormous federal investments from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), the CHIPS and Science Act, and the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). We articulate an approach rooted in the reality of the climate crisis that helps rebalance historic biases away from a fossil-focused grid and advances environmental justice.
What’s Inside
FERC, DOE, and Transmission
- Transmission Planning
- Interconnection Reform
- Backstop Siting for Transmission Lines
- Federal Coordination for Transmission Under DOE
- Community Participation, Tribal Consultation, and Intervenor Compensation
- Community Benefits Agreements
NEPA
- Strengthen Early, Meaningful Community Engagement
- Conduct Cumulative Impacts
- Respect Tribal Sovereignty and Self-Determination
- Boost Agency Staff Capacity and Interagency Coordination
- Plan Smarter and Review Clean Projects Faster Under NEPA Review
State Siting and Permitting
- Legislative Opportunities for States
- Lessons to Draw from Existing State Law