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DOE Commits Nearly $96 Million in Federal Grants to Duke Energy Infrastructure Upgrades

By MGN EditorialJune 5, 2026 at 03:55 PM

The U.S. Department of Energy has announced new grant funding for Duke Energy projects in Kentucky and North Carolina, bringing total federal support to nearly $96 million for critical plant upgrades.

## DOE Commits Nearly $96 Million to Duke Energy Infrastructure Projects The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has announced a new round of grants directed at Duke Energy, pushing total federal funding for the utility's infrastructure improvement programme to nearly $96 million, according to a PR Newswire release issued by the company. The latest tranche of funding will be applied to critical upgrades at Duke Energy facilities in Kentucky and North Carolina. The company stated that the federal support is intended to help modernise plant infrastructure while keeping costs manageable for customers — a dual objective that has become increasingly central to energy policy discussions across the United States. ### Relevance to the Maritime and Energy Sectors While Duke Energy is primarily a land-based utility, its infrastructure investments carry downstream significance for maritime and port operations along the U.S. East Coast and inland waterway corridors. Reliable, modernised energy infrastructure supports port electrification initiatives, cold-ironing facilities that allow vessels to connect to shore power while at berth, and the broader push to reduce emissions in and around port environments. The Kentucky and North Carolina facilities receiving upgrades serve regions with notable maritime and industrial activity, including ports along the Cape Fear River and the broader Carolinas coastline, where shore power availability and grid reliability are increasingly important to vessel operators and terminal managers. ### Federal Energy Investment Context This announcement builds on a series of recent Duke Energy funding disclosures and reflects the continued federal commitment to upgrading ageing U.S. energy infrastructure under broader clean energy and grid resilience programmes. The DOE has been actively deploying grant funding across multiple utilities as part of efforts to strengthen domestic energy capacity and support decarbonisation goals. For maritime stakeholders, the trajectory of such investments is worth monitoring. As the industry accelerates its transition toward alternative fuels and electrified port operations, the reliability and capacity of the onshore grid becomes a foundational concern — one that federal infrastructure spending is beginning to address in a more structured way. Further details on the specific projects and timelines are expected to be outlined in subsequent Duke Energy announcements, according to the company's statement.
#shore power#port electrification#energy infrastructure#DOE funding#grid resilience#decarbonisation#U.S. ports

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