State & Local News
Massachusetts Awards Clean Energy Grants
March 17, 2026
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts has awarded $8.7 million in grant funding to support 34 projects focused on energy efficiency and clean energy upgrades across municipal water facilities, agricultural nonprofits, and small businesses. This initiative is part of a broader state strategy led by Governor Maura Healey and Lieutenant Governor Kim Driscoll to add 10 GW of new energy resources and 5 GW of energy storage by 2035, aiming to promote energy independence, reduce carbon emissions, and save an estimated $10 billion for residents and businesses. These grants are expected to generate over $1.6 million in annual energy cost savings and advance Massachusetts' climate and economic goals.
- The grants create procurement opportunities for energy technology providers, clean energy developers, and storage solution vendors such as Schneider Electric, Nexamp, and Form Energy.
- Procurement professionals should note the state's all-of-the-above energy approach, including solar, wind, nuclear, gas, geothermal, and storage, which broadens the market for diverse energy solutions.
- Organizations serving municipal and nonprofit sectors in Massachusetts should evaluate how to align proposals with state priorities for energy efficiency and carbon reduction.
- The involvement of multiple state agencies (MassDEP, DOER, MassCEC) and regional entities (ISO New England) indicates coordinated procurement and regulatory frameworks supporting these initiatives.
Gap Energy grants are proof that getting to net zero can happen on the local level.
— Lieutenant Governor Kim Driscoll
Massachusetts communities and small businesses are putting these grants to work to build more self-sufficient and reliable energy sources, while locking in long-term savings.
— MassDEP Commissioner Bonnie Heiple
These investments are helping turn energy efficiency and clean energy upgrades into real savings for communities and small businesses.
— Governor Maura Healey
Agencies
Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection, Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources, Massachusetts Clean Energy Center, Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs
Vendors
Schneider Electric, Nexamp, Form Energy, Flatiron Energy, BlueWave
Contracts
$8.7 million