These projects have all been made possible due to an innovative billion-dollar climate fund. The Portland Clean Energy Fund is a first-of-its-kind racial, social and climate justice fund aimed at helping the city's most vulnerable residents adapt to climate change while also reducing carbon emissions.

Since the fund began, it has garnered about $1 billion and is projected to reach $1.6 billion by mid-2029.

"It's a fund that's intended to scale up local, community-based climate solutions that address our very real climate realities, community resilience and economic resiliency."
https://www.npr.org/2026/05/20/nx-s1-5734498/portland-funding-climate-change-corporations-retail-tax

#Solar #Energy #GreenEnery #Oregon #NPR #FossilFuel #Climate #ClimateChange #ClimateDiary #ClimateCrisis

United States power output from renewables exceeds coal for the first time in history

For the first time, the United States produced more energy from renewable sources than from coal, according to new figures from the US Energy Information Administration. Hydroelectric dams, solar panels, and wind turbines generated 68.5 million megawatt-hours of energy during the month of April 2019, compared to 60 million for coal.
A couple of different trends converged to make this milestone possible, some long-term, and some short-term. Over the long term, as Bloomberg notes, the country has been shifting toward natural gas, which is not only cheaper than coal, but it also emits less carbon dioxide (although it’s still a fossil fuel). Wind and solar farms are also springing up nationwide because they’ve become so cheap to build.
See #^https://www.theverge.com/2019/6/26/18759933/usa-coal-power-natural-gas-renewables https://squeet.me/objects/962c3e102c36af7d206161694f01597cbf425035

US power output from renewables exceeds coal for the first time in history

Natural gas is taking over.