US awards record $6 bln to back industrial emissions reduction projects
- The Biden administration announced $6 billion for industrial emissions reduction projects, aiming to eliminate 14 million metric tons of pollution annually.
- Recipients include companies like Kraft Heinz, Cleveland-Cliffs Steel, and Heidelberg Materials, focusing on decarbonizing production processes.
- The goal is to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, promote clean manufacturing, create jobs, and set a standard for sustainable industry practices.
54 Articles
54 Articles
U.S. Department of Energy provides $6 billion to decarbonization projects, including at Cleveland-Cliffs mills and a concrete plant in Indiana
The U.S. Department of Energy is investing $6 billion in decarbonization projects, including in a cement plant in Indiana and two Cleveland-Cliffs steel mills.
US Energy Dept. announces billions for projects to cut industrial emissions
The industrial sector in the United States is reportedly responsible for a fourth of the country's emissions. Now, the Biden administration is spending the largest amount ever on industrial decarbonization projects to fight climate change. The Department of Energy announced it is putting $6 billion in federal funds toward efforts to eliminate up to 14 million metric tons of industrial pollution annually, the equivalent of taking about 3 million …
Biden administration commits $6B to cut emissions from high-carbon industries
The Biden administration is committing $6 billion toward cutting planet-warming emissions from some of the nation’s most polluting and difficult to decarbonize sectors. The funds will go to 33 different projects in sectors including aluminum, cement and concrete, chemicals, iron and steel. It will also go toward the food industry, with projects like electrifying processes…
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