As of October 25, 2024, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced more than $3 billion of funding through the US Department of Agriculture (USDA)’s Empowering Rural America (ERA) program to lower electricity costs as part of the Biden-Harris administration’s Investing in America agenda. [1] The USDA is awarding about $2.5 billion in financing for the Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association, having selected 6 rural electric co-operatives to progress to the next round in the awards process. They award nearly $1 billion in New ERA funds. The Tri-State’s award is expected to lower electricity rates by 10 percent for cooperative members by 2034, amounting to $430 million in rural consumer benefits over a decade. New ERA funds, meanwhile, will finance the purchase of 1,040 MW of renewable energy and over 200 MW of energy storage. They will also aid the Tri-State to refinance the retirement of 1,100 MW of previously and newly announced coal-fired energy generation.
The 6 electric cooperatives announced to move forward in the New ERA process are Connexus energy in Minnesota and South Dakota, Central Electric Power Cooperative Inc in South Carolina, Poudre Valley Rural Electric Association Inc., in Colorado, Nebraska Electric Generation in Nebraska, Rayburn Country Electric Cooperative in Texas, and Yampa Valley Electric Association in Colorado. This will leverage investments of $6.4 billion for 1.75 GW of clean energy for rural communities across the country.