
Noah Roberts
@noahvrob
Energy Storage @USCleanPower | Fmr Wisconsin Fed Director & Team @GovEvers | Fmr School Board President @VASD_K12 | @UWLaFollette + @UWMadison alum
ID: 1248102202545188864
09-04-2020 04:15:38
221 Tweet
528 Followers
1,1K Following










Thank you to American Clean Power (ACP) members Tesla, Fluence, Form Energy along with Shelley Moore Capito and @repCiscomani for being part of this major announcement and the role they each play in securing America’s energy future.


Exciting day for energy storage in America! 🇺🇲 Today, members of our Form Factory 1 team joined American Clean Power (ACP) in Washington, D.C. in support of a historic announcement from the U.S. energy storage industry. Today, ACP, on behalf of the U.S. energy storage industry, announced a



Today American Clean Power (ACP) and the U.S. energy storage industry unveiled a landmark commitment to invest $100 billion in American grid battery manufacturing. Tesla Energy VP Mike Snyder said that batteries are the quickest asset that can be deployed and connected to the grid as the

Arizona is a leader in energy storage with the second most grid batteries currently under construction. Arizona is creating a grid battery manufacturing ecosystem and Congressman Juan Ciscomani emphasized the importance of maintaining tax credits to drive development across the state.


Form Factory 1 in Weirton, West Virginia is one of many facilities planning expansion as part of the $100 billion investment announced Tuesday in the U.S. Capitol. Shelley Moore Capito was there to praise the expansion of the retired steel mill-turned-battery storage factory.



ACP commends Congresswoman Jen Kiggans for introducing the Certainty for our Energy Future Act, legislation which offers a constructive starting point for discussions on the clean energy tax credits. With power demand set to surge 50% in 15 years, this roadmap is critical. Kelsey Brugger



New analysis from Rhodium Group shows slashing clean energy tax credits will gut renewables from the grid — and raise household energy costs by up to 7%. Fewer options = higher prices. bit.ly/43uBcHB