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Indiana is expected to add a lot of solar power in the next five years — roughly equal to more than five Hoover Dams.
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Lawmakers have tackled a bevy of topics this week from immigration to lab-grown meat and natural gas to sheriff commissary funds.
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Indiana’s climate action plan prioritizes things like expanding renewable energy and green industrial processes, making buildings more energy efficient, adopting electric vehicles, reducing food waste, and filling out Indiana's urban tree canopy.
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As Indiana continues a shift to solar energy, one major group has been left out of many discussions of switching out farmland for solar panels; those who lease land to make a living.
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A state law says counties that have wind or solar ordinances more restrictive than state guidelines can’t access state incentives. But a new state House bill, HB 1278, would let counties that nearly meet the guidelines get them too.
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Environmental, racial justice, and faith leaders worry Hoosiers most affected by industrial pollution won’t be given priority for clean hydrogen jobs.
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o meet federal renewable energy goals, the U.S. will have to build a lot more of these lines to get that electricity where it needs to go.
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The U.S. hasn’t found a cost-effective way to recycle panels and turbines yet, and that could mean a lot of waste in the next 20 to 30 years.
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Biden met with students and faculty in Ivy Tech Community College's renewable energy program, who demonstrated what they've learned in the fields of electric line technology, wind energy and solar energy.
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Lawmakers have opposed using taxpayer dollars for the renewable-ready program for the second time since it was set up.