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U.S. announces $440 million to install solar panels on low-income Puerto Ricans’ homes

The seaside neighborhood of La Perla in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
The seaside neighborhood of La Perla in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in August 2017.
(Ricardo Arduengo / Associated Press)
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The U.S. Department of Energy announced Thursday that it will disburse $440 million to install solar panels on the homes of low-income Puerto Ricans as the U.S. territory struggles with ongoing power outages and a crumbling electric grid.

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, who is visiting Puerto Rico for the sixth time this year, said the department has selected a group of nonprofit organizations and solar companies for the project, which will target up to 40,000 homes. Eligible households would be located in impoverished communities that experience frequent power outages or have a person with a disability that depends on power, such as a dialysis patient.

Hundreds of thousands of people across Puerto Rico remain without power nearly two days after a fire at a main power plant sparked an island-wide outage.

April 8, 2022

Granholm said $400 million will be awarded to three solar companies and $40 million to five nonprofit organizations. The installations are expected to start by early next year, according to the Department of Energy.

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“Right now, Puerto Rico is No. 5 in the country in terms of per capita of solar installations. We want it be No. 1,” she said.

The announcement is the newest push to help Puerto Rico lessen its dependence on fossil fuels and a disintegrating electric grid neglected for decades before it was razed by Hurricane Maria in 2017 and battered by Hurricane Fiona last year. Both storms caused island-wide blackouts, and while emergency repairs were made to the grid at the time, reconstruction from Hurricane Maria only started earlier this year.

The Sierra Club and other groups say the projects would be built on lands that are ecologically sensitive and of high agricultural value.

Aug. 15, 2023

“I am impatient with the grid,” Granholm said. “Half of your generation facilities are not working.”

In December 2022, the U.S. Congress approved $1 billion to help restore Puerto Rico’s grid while the U.S. government formed a task force charged with improving the grid’s resilience and deployment of resources.

Earlier this year, the U.S. government shipped three mega generators to supply emergency power generation amid ongoing outages.

Petroleum now generates 97% of Puerto Rico’s electricity. The governor has pledged to obtain 40% of the island’s power from renewable resources by 2025 and 60% by 2040.

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