DOE increases funding and support for community clean energy program

DOE increases funding and support for community clean energy program
(Courtesy: Ricardo Gomez Angel/Unsplash)

DOE announced new funding, technical assistance, and peer learning opportunities across all three program offerings of the Clean Energy to Communities (C2C) program, which aims to support local governments, electric utilities, community-based groups, and other decision-makers making a clean energy transition with tools developed at DOE’s national laboratories. 

In addition to the increased funding and support, DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) released the first C2C annual report, which highlights more than 200 communities across the United States that have participated in the program.

C2C in-depth partnerships

NREL released a Request for Proposals to support 2-4 communities in developing tailored, actionable decarbonization strategies as part of C2C in-depth partnerships offering. Teams comprising a local government, electric utility, and community-based organizations can apply for a multi-year partnership with experts from DOE’s national laboratories.

Lab experts will aim to help these teams better understand, model, and validate potential clean energy deployment strategies. In-depth partnerships focus on key challenges that address multiple sectors, including the renewable energy, mobility, grid, and buildings sectors.

Awards include up to $500,000 in subcontract funding and up to $3,500,000 in the form of in-depth technical assistance from one or more national laboratories. Funding can be used to support staff, community engagement activities, and purchasing clean energy infrastructure or technology.

Applications are due by June 14.   

Past and ongoing in-depth partnership highlights include:

  • Pilot project supporting an Alaska utility’s transition from coal to clean energy
  • Active in-depth partnerships in Chicago, Illinois; Colorado Springs, Colorado; Delaware Valley, Pennsylvania and New Jersey; Moloka‘i, Hawaii; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; and Sitka, Alaska. 

Peer-learning cohorts

NREL announced a new round of C2C peer-learning cohorts. Ten to fifteen communities will convene regularly from July-December 2024 to exchange strategies and best practices and learn from national laboratory experts on the following topics:

  • Designing and enhancing energy efficiency programs for residential buildings
  • Charting a path to municipal fleet electrification
  • Implementing an agrivoltaics project 

Applications are due by April 30

Past peer-learning cohorts, as well as the three ongoing cohorts, have achieved several notable successes:

  • Cook County, Illinois, developed an EV-charging strategy.
  • Little Rock, Arkansas, established a plan to achieve 100% clean energy for its municipal operations by 2030.
  • The San Diego Association of Governments found new ways to enhance community participation in clean energy planning.
  • Clean Cities and Communities offered ongoing support to participants during and between cohort sessions.


Short-term technical assistance

C2C’s expert match program provides between 40 and 60 hours of tailored technical assistance to help local governments, electric utilities, community-based groups, and others address short-term energy challenges. Applications are accepted on a rolling basis.

Past expert match highlights include:

  • Partnering with the Black Farmers Collaborative to explore agrivoltaics on farms in Florida and across the Southeast 
  • Exploring the potential of floating solar on a municipal reservoir with Cohoes, New York
  • Identifying opportunities for commercial building efficiency in Unincorporated Norcross, Georgia
  • Identifying the costs and benefits of various strategies for achieving net-zero operations in Washtenaw County, Michigan.