The Obama administration will put $68 million toward improving green energy infrastructure in rural areas, the White House announced on Thursday. The allocation of those funds, which according to a White House statement will go toward “540 renewable energy and energy efficiency projects in rural areas,” is just one of a slate of environmental measures the administration unveiled this week.
The other measures include a proposal to tighten regulations on air conditioner efficiency and building codes. The White House said it would also work with military bases to train veterans for jobs in the solar energy industry.
The initiatives announced on Thursday are the latest in a series of unilateral executive actions aimed at combating climate change. These efforts began near the beginning of President Obama’s second term, shortly after he tapped former Clinton aide and Center for American Progress (CAP) founder John Podesta to join his administration as an adviser. Due to the dim prospects that any ambitious climate change legislation could ever make it through this Congress, part of Podesta’s brief was to come up with ways in which the White House could act on its own. The result has been a series of executive orders and regulatory overhauls aimed at reducing carbon emissions and boosting renewable energy.









