Richard Sapienza
Grants
The Clean Fuel Advanced Technology 2023 Project (CFAT 2023) supports both education and outreach to promote the use of technologies that reduce transportation related emissions and clean transportation technology grants in eligible counties in North Carolina.
The NC Clean Energy Technology Center is assisting the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians in incorporating new electric school buses into their fleet in order to reduce diesel emissions. This project is funded by the U.S. EPA.
The Clean Fuel Advanced Technology 2022 Project (CFAT 2022) supports both education and outreach to promote the use of technologies that reduce transportation related emissions and clean transportation technology grants in eligible counties in North Carolina.
This project is evaluating the disater resilience of existing and planned alternative fuel infrastructure in the Carolinas and planning for improving the resilience.
The NC Clean Energy Technology Center uses the Clean Fuel Advanced Technology grant from NCDOT to provide grants for fleets in North Carolina to purchase clean transportation technologies in order to reduce transportation related emissions. The grant also supports education and outreach activities to educate fleets and the public about ways that they can reduce transportation-related emissions.
The NC Clean Energy Technology Center uses the Clean Fuel Advanced Technology grant from NCDOT to provide grants for fleets in North Carolina to purchase clean transportation technologies in order to reduce transportation related emissions. The grant also supports education and outreach activities to educate fleets and the public about ways that they can reduce transportation-related emissions.
The NC Clean Energy Technology Center will facilitate a stakeholder convening process in order to update the existing NC Plug-in Electric Vehicle Plan.
The NC Clean Energy Technology Center is working with RTI to research autonomous vehicles and shared mobility projects across the United States.
The NC Clean Energy Technology Center (NCCETC) at North Carolina State University requests a total of $100,000.00 from the State Energy Program at the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality. The AFV project will fund on-road alternative fuel vehicle (natural gas, propane or electric dedicated, bi-fuel or hybrid)projects throughout the state of North Carolina. Public and private sector organizations will have the opportunity to directly reduce transportation related emissions with alternative fuel and eligible advanced technology vehicles through a sub-award solicitation process initiated by the NCCETC. Funding will be applied to the incremental cost of a new alternative fuel vehicle over a conventional petroleum fueled vehicle or toward the cost of converting a conventional fueled vehicle to run on an alternative fuel. Applicants will be awarded on the basis of cost-versus-emission benefit, perceived public benefit, and the applicant’s cost share contribution. A minimum of fifty percent cost share will be contributed by project sub-award participants and partners and documented accordingly as NCSU submits for reimbursement.