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US Energy Department determines three concern areas for electric transmission increase

The U.S. Department of Energy has zeroed in on three regions of the country it has identified are in significant need of new electric transmission facilities and eligible for future federal financing, it revealed on Monday.

The DOE selected Lake Erie-Canada, including parts of Lake Erie and Pennsylvania; the Southwestern Grid Adapter, including parts of Colorado, New Mexico, and a little part of western Oklahoma; and the Tribal Energy Access Passage, consisting of main parts of North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, and five Tribal Appointments, as National Interest Electric Transmission Corridors.

WHY IT'S IMPORTANT

The DOE has narrowed down a preliminary list of national interest corridors to 3 from 10. The classification would enable the federal government to expedite the development of grid expansion projects. It is meant to help locations that come to grips with high electricity costs and power disturbances bring in more financial investment in bandwidth.

Electrical energy need across the U.S. is growing substantially amid the rapid growth of information centers and synthetic intelligence.

BY THE NUMBERS

The projects could be qualified for federally supported loans. The 2022 Inflation Decrease Act appropriated $2 billion to cover the credit aid expense of those loans, and the DOE is looking for public input on the scope of eligible tasks and job financing requirements.

SECRET CONTEXT

The comment period for the 3 passages would encompass February 2025, after President-elect Donald Trump takes office. Trump has stated he might state a national energy emergency to accelerate the building and construction of new electric capacity and domestic energy. His shift team was not instantly available for comment.

(source: Reuters)