“US and EU Green Energy Grid Investment Surge Amid Transmission Capacity Focus”

“US and EU Green Energy Grid Investment Surge Amid Transmission Capacity Focus”

US and EU Green Energy Grid Modernisation and Transmission Investment Trends

Recent OSINT indicates increased funding and policy initiatives for grid infrastructure expansion and resilience in the US and EU, emphasizing transmission capacity and renewable integration. Key developments include US federal grants and EU investment plans, highlighting ongoing infrastructure scaling and mineral demand growth.

DOE’s $3.9 billion Grid Resilience and Innovation Partnerships (GRIP) program expands to $10.5 billion, with significant focus on wildfire hardening and transmission capacity. The EU’s “Grid Action Plan” proposes €584 billion in investments by 2030, with permitting reforms expected by Q3 2024.

The US National Transmission Needs Study identifies 91 GW of new transfer capacity required by 2035, while FERC’s Order 1920 aims to accelerate regional transmission planning every 20 years. The UK plans £58 billion for offshore wind integration through new transmission lines, expanding prior estimates.

PJM’s transmission queue shows 290 GW of projects awaiting access, with 94 GW cleared, indicating persistent bottlenecks in US grid expansion. Copper demand for grid build-out is projected to increase by 40% by 2030, tightening critical mineral markets.

Collectively, these signals demonstrate a significant push toward large-scale grid modernization, renewable integration, and infrastructure resilience, with policy and funding signals aligning to support energy transition goals.

These developments suggest ongoing capital flows into transmission infrastructure and critical mineral markets, with increased focus on scaling energy grid capacity and resilience in both the US and EU. The OSINT indicates a broad effort to address bottlenecks and support renewable energy deployment at a national and regional level.

The dataset does not specify detailed funding allocation breakdowns or project-specific timelines beyond the highlighted initiatives, nor does it include private sector investment figures or regional disparities within the broader infrastructure plans.

SEOHASHTAGS: #GreenEnergy #GridModernisation #TransmissionInvestment #EnergyInfrastructure #Renewables #USEnergyPolicy #EUEnergy #CriticalMinerals #EnergyTransition

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