The Clean Energy States Alliance (CESA), a national, nonprofit coalition of public agencies working together to advance clean energy, is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2014 State Leadership in Clean Energy Awards. This year’s winners, as chosen by an independent panel of five distinguished judges, 1 are as follows:
- The Alaska Energy Authority and the Kodiak Energy Association for Kodiak, Alaska: A 99% Renewable Energy Community
- The Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection for the Connecticut Microgrid Program
- The Connecticut Green Bank for the Commercial Property Assessed Clean Energy (C-PACE) program
- The Energy Trust of Oregon for the City of Gresham Wastewater Treatment Plant
- The Massachusetts Clean Energy Center for the Massachusetts Clean Energy Internship Program
- The New Mexico Energy Conservation and Management Division for the Renewable Energy Production Tax Credit
- The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) for its CHP Acceleration Program
- The Sacramento Municipal Utility District for SMUD’s Community Renewable Energy Deployment Program
“These award winners illustrate the tremendous creativity and commitment being shown by state agencies across the country in implementing clean energy,” said Warren Leon, executive director of CESA. “With eight very different programs highlighting diverse technologies including solar PV, wind, energy storage, hydropower, anaerobic digesters, microgrids, and combined heat and power, the 2014 State Leadership in Clean Energy award winners demonstrate that clean energy can create jobs, clean up the environment, and benefit local economies. These are programs to emulate.”
- CESA member organizations from across the US submitted nominations for the leadership awards. Entries were judged based on public benefits and results, cost effectiveness, leadership and innovation, and replicability. Winners were chosen by an independent panel of distinguished judges: Steve Lindenberg (senior advisor for renewable power at the US Department of Energy); Andrea Luecke (president and executive director of the Solar Foundation); former Colorado Governor Bill Ritter (Director of the Center for a New Energy Economy); Larry Sherwood (vice president and COO of the Interstate Renewable Energy Council); and Robert Thresher (research fellow at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory).