Skip to main content
Press Releases

Columbia Selected for Communities Local Energy Action Program

By April 4, 2022April 18th, 2022No Comments

The City of Columbia has been notified that it is one of 22 communities selected as part of the Communities Local Energy Action Program. “Thanks to our Federal partners at the Department of Energy, Columbia will have an opportunity to increase innovation in our city. We look forward to working with DOE to establish a program in Columbia that fosters new ideas and collaboration to help make Columbia a cleaner place to live,” said Mayor Daniel Rickenmann.

Please see below a detailed U.S. Department of Energy press release regarding this new initiative.

March 29, 2022

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced the inaugural communities selected as part of the Communities Local Energy Action Program (Communities LEAP), a first-of-its-kind initiative designed to help energy-overburdened communities take direct control of their clean energy future. The 22 communities will receive support from DOE to create community-wide action plans that reduce local air pollution, increase energy resilience, lower utility costs and energy burdens, and provide long-term jobs and economic opportunities. DOE’s pilot Communities LEAP reflects the Biden-Harris Administration’s priorities to assist community-led transitions to a clean energy economy, and to build a healthier, more equitable, and sustainable future.

“The President committed to making a historic investment in our clean energy future and environmental justice,” said Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm. “With today’s Communities LEAP announcement, we will use the power of the Federal government, DOE’s National Labs and other experts to help our communities develop clear, actionable plans to reimagine their energy future and protect the health and safety of all residents.”

Communities LEAP helps communities across the nation develop place-based approaches to building the clean energy economy of the future. By providing targeted technical assistance, LEAP will open the door for communities to access significant, additional DOE and other federal government programs, including those included in the $1.3 trillion Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. Communities LEAP also implements the Biden-Harris Administration’s Justice40 commitment, which aims to ensure that federal agencies deliver at least 40% of benefits from certain investments to disadvantaged communities and advances the work of the Interagency Working Group on Coal and Power Plant Communities, which focuses on delivering federal investment to hard-hit energy communities.

“Communities across the country must be able to take advantage of these historic investments in clean energy infrastructure, energy efficiency, and clean transportation,” said Mitch Landrieu, White House Senior Advisor and Infrastructure Coordinator. “Technical assistance programs like Communities LEAP will help ensure these communities are prepared for the many funding opportunities available from President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law as we transition to a clean energy economy.”

The transition to a clean energy economy lowers local air pollution and energy burdens and is also poised to bring billions of dollars in continued investments to communities across the country while generating good-paying jobs. In 2019, renewable energy investments in the U.S. reached $55 billion and clean energy jobs paid 25% more than the national median wage. Workers in clean energy earned a median hourly wage of $23.89 compared to the national median wage of $19.14.

The 22 selected communities will work with DOE and its network of technical assistance providers, government and non-governmental partners, community-based organizations, utilities as well as environmental justice, economic development, and equitable investment organizations to develop roadmaps for clean energy economic development pathways. The inaugural Communities LEAP localities will pursue strategies for planning and investment in:

  • Energy efficient buildings and beneficial electrification
  • Clean energy development
  • Clean transportation and enhanced mobility
  • Carbon capture and storage
  • Critical minerals recovery
  • Resilient microgrids and energy storage
  • Manufacturing and industry opportunities

The selected communities are: 

  • Alachua County, Florida
  • Bakersfield, California
  • Birmingham (North Birmingham), Alabama
  • Columbia, South Carolina
  • Columbia Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, Oregon, Washington, Idaho
  • Duluth, Minnesota
  • Hennepin County, Minnesota
  • Highland Park, Michigan
  • Iowa Tribe of Kansas and Nebraska
  • Jackson County, Illinois
  • Kern County, California
  • Lawrence, Massachusetts
  • Louisville, Kentucky
  • Mingo & Logan Counties, West Virginia
  • Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • New Orleans, Louisiana
  • Pembroke Township and Hopkins Park, Illinois
  • Pittsburgh (Hill District), Pennsylvania
  • Questa, New Mexico
  • Richmond, California
  • San José, California
  • Seattle (Beacon Hill), Washington

Communities LEAP is supported by six DOE offices: Energy Efficiency and Renewable EnergyFossil Energy and Carbon ManagementElectricityIndian EnergyPolicy, and Economic Impact and Diversity.

Learn more about the selected communities announced today. To find community-driven energy support for remote and island communities, visit the Energy Transitions Initiative Partnership Project or explore how DOE’s Energy Storage for Social Equity Initiative (ES4SEI) is empowering urban, rural, and tribal disadvantaged communities to get on a path towards community prosperity. The ES4SE recently announced the selection of 14 underserved communities to receive technical assistance to leverage energy storage as a means of increasing resilience and long-term affordability.

###

The Columbia, SC Ready For 100 program, guided by City staff and the Climate Protection Action Committee, commits the city to achieve 100% clean and renewable energy by 2036 for all citizens, and to assure that the benefits of clean energy are equitably distributed to the city’s residents and businesses.  In Columbia, low-income residents, most of whom are renters, are disproportionately affected by high electricity costs. Addressing the energy burden of low-income renters in multi-family housing, including public housing, provides an opportunity for an electrified and clean housing future.  The Columbia team will identify pathways most likely to deliver on the promise of lowered energy burdens in the design of the city’s 100% renewable energy future based on the community’s values, its residents’ pocketbooks, the City’s treasury, and the State of South Carolina’s energy goals.