In its 2024 "Most & Least Energy-Efficient States" report, WalletHub ranks Texas at No. 36 out of the 50 states with a score of 47.5 out of 100 points.| Energy Capital
The U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Technology Transitions selected 225 teams from 117 schools from 39 states — including three Houston-area universities — to participate in its annual startup competition.| Energy Capital
Houston has been selected as one of the hubs backed by a new program from the United States Department of Energy that's developing communities for clean energy innovation.| Energy Capital
The Texas LoanSTAR (Saving Taxes and Resources) Revolving Loan Program finances energy-related, cost-reduction retrofits of facilities supported by the state, including public school districts, public colleges and universities, units of local government including a county, city, town, public hospital taxing districts, or political subdivisions| comptroller.texas.gov
Ten Houston-area companies will receive vouchers from the Department of Energy's latest round of funding to support the adoption of clean energy tech.| Energy Capital
A subsidiary of Houston-based energy company Occidental has snagged a roughly $600 million federal grant to establish a hub south of Corpus Christi that’ll remove carbon emissions from the air.| Energy Capital
Four Houston companies have received $50,000 each from the U.S. Department of Energy to further develop their carbon dioxide removal technology.| Energy Capital