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Duke Energy Commits $500,000 to South Carolina Emergency Preparedness Grants
By MGN Editorial•June 5, 2026 at 03:55 PM
Duke Energy has awarded $500,000 in grants to 34 nonprofits and government agencies across South Carolina to bolster emergency preparedness capabilities, continuing a programme that has distributed $2.5 million since 2022.
Duke Energy has announced $500,000 in emergency preparedness funding for South Carolina first responders, distributing grants across 34 nonprofits and government agencies throughout the Palmetto State as part of its ongoing HERO Grant Program.
According to a PR Newswire release dated June 5, 2026, the latest round of funding brings the programme's cumulative total to $2.5 million across 133 grants since its inception in 2022. The initiative is designed to deliver critical support to local agencies responsible for emergency response infrastructure and community resilience.
While the announcement originates from the energy sector, the funding carries relevance for coastal and port communities across South Carolina, where emergency preparedness intersects directly with maritime operations. Ports such as the Port of Charleston — one of the busiest container terminals on the US East Coast — rely on coordinated regional emergency response networks that include the types of nonprofits and local agencies supported by programmes of this kind.
Strengthening first-responder capacity in coastal states is increasingly viewed as a strategic priority, particularly as extreme weather events and industrial incidents continue to test the resilience of port and waterway infrastructure. Energy utilities with significant coastal footprints, such as Duke Energy, play a growing role in supporting the broader emergency management ecosystem that underpins safe maritime and port operations.
Duke Energy serves approximately 800,000 customers in South Carolina and operates infrastructure that intersects with the state's industrial and port corridors. The HERO Grant Program represents the company's structured commitment to community-level emergency readiness, with grant recipients spanning volunteer fire departments, emergency medical services, and local government preparedness offices.
The maritime and port sector will be watching how such utility-led community investment programmes evolve, particularly as federal emergency preparedness funding faces ongoing budgetary scrutiny. Private-sector initiatives of this scale offer a complementary mechanism for sustaining first-responder capacity in regions where maritime commerce and coastal hazard exposure are closely linked.
#emergency preparedness#coastal resilience#port safety#South Carolina#energy infrastructure#first responders#community investment
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