With Green Energy, Louisiana Group Looks to Be Next Silicon Valley

In 1901, the twin oil discoveries of the historic Spindletop well in Beaumont, Texas, and Louisiana’s first successful well in a Jennings rice field paved the way for the growth of an energy industry that modernized the Gulf South.

More than 120 years later, a consortium of Louisiana colleges, universities, governments and businesses has hopes of being the catalyst for the next leap forward in energy, turning the state into a new “Silicon Valley” for the transition away from fuels and industrial processes believed to contribute to climate change.

Known as the Future Use of Energy in Louisiana, or FUEL, the new consortium will be funded primarily, at first, through what could be the largest grant ever offered by the U.S. National Science Foundation — $160 million over 10 years if the consortium meets its benchmarks and Congress fully funds the program.

Government Technology

Michael Randle

Michael Randle