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Find similar grantsMI Healthy Climate Challenge is sponsored by Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE) Office of Climate and Energy. A grant program supporting projects that help Michigan meet its Healthy Climate Plan goals, including expanding equitable access to solar energy and increasing access to clean energy funding.
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# MI Healthy Climate Challenge Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy * District office locations * Boards and advisory groups * Accountability and Transparency * Mission, Vision, and Values Go to Divisions and Offices * Drinking Water and Environmental Health * Geologic Resources Management * Office of Legislative Affairs * Office of Climate and Energy * Office of Public Information * Office of the Clean Water Public Advocate * Office of the Environmental Justice Public Advocate * Office of the Great Lakes * Remediation and Redevelopment District office locations Go to District office locations A complete list of all programs within the Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE) Boards and advisory groups Go to Boards and advisory groups Go to Career Opportunities Accountability and Transparency Go to Accountability and Transparency * Nondiscrimination in EGLE Programs Mission, Vision, and Values Go to Mission, Vision, and Values Community involvement and public participation are an essential part of EGLE’s mission, vision, and values.
* Public Participation Policy * Community Engagement Database Go to Services we provide * Environmental Lending Station * Drinking Water in Michigan * Learn About our Great Lakes * Inland Lakes and Streams * Making Contaminated Sites Safe for Reuse * Water Quality Monitoring Go to Legislative reports Go to Regulatory Assistance * Environmental rules and regulations * Water Operator Certification Programs Go to Compliance Assistance * Environmental audit privilege and immunity * Environmental Consultant Assistance SARA Title III establishes requirements regarding emergency planning and "Community Right-to-Know" reporting on hazardous and toxic chemicals for federal, state, local, and tribal governments, as well as regulated facilities.
* Michigan Facilities’ Guide Environmental rules and regulations Go to Environmental rules and regulations * Michigan Guide to Environmental Regulations * Policies and procedures * EGLE Grants System (EGX) Go to State Revolving Fund Water Operator Certification Programs Go to Water Operator Certification Programs Go to Legislative reports * Michigan Environmental Health and Drinking Water Information System (MiEHDWIS) * Remediation Information Data Exchange (RIDE) Information about the GeoWebFace application.
Michigan Environmental Health and Drinking Water Information System (MiEHDWIS) Go to Michigan Environmental Health and Drinking Water Information System (MiEHDWIS) Remediation Information Data Exchange (RIDE) Go to Remediation Information Data Exchange (RIDE) Resources and information on utilizing RRD's data exchange and the Inventory of Facilities.
* Cleanup Contract Information * Submittals Under Legal Agreements * Accessing Electronic Documents (Files) * RIDE Submittal Types & Guidance * Guide to Electronic Submittals * Guide to Location Not Found Submittal * Submitting Onsite Work Activity Notices An interactive map displaying contaminated sites throughout Michigan regulated under Parts 213, 201, and 211.
The Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy’s (EGLE) Water Well Viewer (WWV), is an interactive mapping system that displays water wells along with other information, such as wellhead protection areas, underground storage tanks, and sites of environmental contamination. Water well locations have been identified by address matching, the use of global positioning systems (GPS), and by legal descriptions.
This system allows water well drilling and pump installation contractors to submit water well records.
Go to Wetlands Map Viewer Go to View all maps and apps * Past Events and Recorded Webinars EGLE's interactive calendar is designed to provide timely information on decisions before the Director, proposed settlements of contested cases, administrative rules promulgation, public hearings, meetings and comment deadlines, and environmental conferences, workshops and training programs. * Binational Lake St.
Clair Conference * Great Lakes PFAS Summit * Great Lakes Drinking Water Conference * Great Lakes Environmental Emergency Response and Management Conference * Great Lakes Microplastics Summit * Great Lakes Water Infrastructure Conference * Michigan Environmental Compliance Conference * Michigan Environmental Justice Conference * Michigan Sustainability Conference * MI Healthy Climate Conference * MI Materials Management Conference * Source Water Protection Conference * State of the Western Lake Erie Basin Conference EGLE celebrates Earth Day every year in April - celebrate with us!
* Environmental Service Award * Poster contest information * 52 ways to celebrate Earth Day Past Events and Recorded Webinars Go to Past Events and Recorded Webinars * Community Learning Series * Environmental emergency preparedness and response * MiEnviro Portal for Air * MiEnviro for Everyone webinar series * Remediation and risk management * SARA Title III - Tier II * Environmental emergencies * Environmental Assistance Center * Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests * District office locations * Legal service of process * Lobbyable Public Officials Environmental emergencies Go to Environmental emergencies Environmental Assistance Center Go to Environmental Assistance Center Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests Go to Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests Go to Divisions and Offices District office locations Go to District office locations Go to Legal service of process Anyone wishing to formally serve legal documents upon the Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE), or its officers or employees, may do so by the following methods.
Lobbyable Public Officials Go to Lobbyable Public Officials * District office locations * Boards and advisory groups * Accountability and Transparency * Mission, Vision, and Values BackDivisions and Offices * Drinking Water and Environmental Health * Geologic Resources Management * Office of Legislative Affairs * Office of Climate and Energy * Office of Public Information * Office of the Clean Water Public Advocate * Office of the Environmental Justice Public Advocate * Office of the Great Lakes * Remediation and Redevelopment BackDistrict office locations BackBoards and advisory groups BackAccountability and Transparency * Nondiscrimination in EGLE Programs BackMission, Vision, and Values * Public Participation Policy * Community Engagement Database * Environmental Lending Station * Drinking Water in Michigan * Learn About our Great Lakes * Inland Lakes and Streams * Making Contaminated Sites Safe for Reuse * Water Quality Monitoring BackRegulatory Assistance * Environmental rules and regulations * Water Operator Certification Programs BackCompliance Assistance * Environmental audit privilege and immunity * Environmental Consultant Assistance * Michigan Facilities’ Guide BackEnvironmental rules and regulations * Michigan Guide to Environmental Regulations * Policies and procedures * EGLE Grants System (EGX) BackWater Operator Certification Programs * Michigan Environmental Health and Drinking Water Information System (MiEHDWIS) * Remediation Information Data Exchange (RIDE) BackMichigan Environmental Health and Drinking Water Information System (MiEHDWIS) BackRemediation Information Data Exchange (RIDE) * Cleanup Contract Information * Submittals Under Legal Agreements * Accessing Electronic Documents (Files) * RIDE Submittal Types & Guidance * Guide to Electronic Submittals * Guide to Location Not Found Submittal * Submitting Onsite Work Activity Notices BackView all maps and apps * Past Events and Recorded Webinars * Binational Lake St.
Clair Conference * Great Lakes PFAS Summit * Great Lakes Drinking Water Conference * Great Lakes Environmental Emergency Response and Management Conference * Great Lakes Microplastics Summit * Great Lakes Water Infrastructure Conference * Michigan Environmental Compliance Conference * Michigan Environmental Justice Conference * Michigan Sustainability Conference * MI Healthy Climate Conference * MI Materials Management Conference * Source Water Protection Conference * State of the Western Lake Erie Basin Conference * Environmental Service Award * Poster contest information * 52 ways to celebrate Earth Day BackPast Events and Recorded Webinars * Community Learning Series * Environmental emergency preparedness and response * MiEnviro Portal for Air * MiEnviro for Everyone webinar series * Remediation and risk management * SARA Title III - Tier II * Environmental emergencies * Environmental Assistance Center * Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests * District office locations * Legal service of process * Lobbyable Public Officials BackEnvironmental emergencies BackEnvironmental Assistance Center BackFreedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests BackDivisions and Offices BackDistrict office locations BackLegal service of process BackLobbyable Public Officials /egle/about/organization/climate-and-energy/mi-healthy-climate-challenge Back to Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy Search is currently unavailable.
Please try again later. * Michigan PFAS Action Response Team (MPART) * Water operator certification programs * Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) * Emergency planning (SARA Title III) * Report an environmental emergency? * Get help with a permit?
* Dispose of household hazardous waste? * Test my home for radon? * Test my drinking water?
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# MI Healthy Climate Challenge Picture of black and white solar panels # MI Healthy Climate Challenge 1. [](https://www. michigan.
gov/egle "Home") 4. Office of Climate and Energy 5. MI Healthy Climate Challenge MI Healthy Climate Challenge #4: Go Big, Go Clean launches April 21!
This grant will support feasibility studies that help Michigan industry evaluate practical near-term decarbonization interventions while also identifying the technologies, conditions, and support needed to achieve these deeper emissions reductions over time. Letters of Intent are due by 11:59 PM EST, Tuesday, May 19, 2026.
More information and how to apply The MI Healthy Climate Challenge (The Challenge) is Michigan’s boldest call to action yet—putting millions in green energy grants into the hands of Michiganders to accelerate the clean energy transition. There has never been a more urgent time to act. To reach our climate goals, Michigan must rapidly scale renewable energy, electrification, energy storage, and efficiency efforts.
The Challenge is designed to break down barriers, spark new partnerships, and launch transformative projects that deliver real impact. These grants will fuel high-impact initiatives that cut emissions, create good-paying jobs, and unlock even greater investment in Michigan’s clean energy economy.
From energy efficiency and electrification to innovative financing models, we’re seeking bold, catalytic proposals that push boundaries and deliver real solutions for communities. Local governments, nonprofits, businesses, and more—if you’re ready to lead in the clean energy transition, Michigan is ready to invest.
Throughout the year, the MI Healthy Climate Challenge will launch a series of grant competitions to drive clean energy deployment and unlock additional investment across Michigan. Picture of a green windmill, hospital, church, and school ### Challenge #2: Unlocking Elective Pay Challenge #2 will help entities across Michigan access federal clean energy tax credits.
This Challenge will provide grants to develop and deploy strategies that help nonprofits, local and Tribal governments, public school districts, electric cooperatives, houses of worship, and other tax-exempt entities access and utilize federal clean energy tax credits, specifically by using Elective Pay.
Learn more about Unlocking Elective Pay Unlocking Elective Pay program guide Michigan with a coin sprouting a leaf ### Challenge #3: Growing Green Lending Challenge #3 will help expand green lending for climate, clean energy, and energy efficiency projects across Michigan.
This Challenge will provide grants to organizations developing new strategies and partnerships that strengthen community lenders’ ability to support clean energy projects. Funded projects may include community engagement and education, lender training, borrower readiness support, early stage project development, contractor-lender coordination, and other activities that make clean energy financing easier to deploy and access.
Learn more about Growing Green Lending Growing Green Lending Program Guide An icon of an industrial plant with leaves coming out of the stacks to represent green industry ### Challenge #4: Go Big, Go Clean We are excited to announce the launch of Challenge #4: Go Big, Go Clean to support industrial decarbonization in Michigan!
This challenge will provide grants to support feasibility studies that help Michigan industries evaluate practical near-term decarbonization interventions while also identifying the technologies, conditions, and support needed to achieve deeper emissions reductions over time. Funding can be used to support studies, assessments, analyses, and related planning work that support industrial decarbonization at Michigan facilities.
Learn more about Go Big, Go Clean Go Big, Go Clean Program Guide ## Challenge #1: Solar for Savings: MI Solar for All Pilot Projects - PAUSED **PAUSED**due to termination letter from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency dated August 7, 2025 for the MI Solar for All program. We are currently working with Michigan's Attorney General on the next steps.
Challenge #1 will support MI Solar for All pilot projects that will bring solar energy savings to low-income households, boost energy resilience, and help shape the future of clean energy access across Michigan. If you have a vision for expanding solar and energy storage solutions in your community, this is your chance to make it happen with funding support!
Learn more about Solar for Savings FAQ: MI Solar for Savings The MI Healthy Climate Challenge seeks to achieve the following key objectives: * **Accelerate clean energy deployment:**Support innovative clean energy projects to reach 100% carbon neutrality by 2050 and a 52% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 as outlined in the MI Healthy Climate Plan.
* **Expand access to climate funding:**Help Michigan entities secure public and private funding for clean energy and climate initiatives. * **Build a robust project pipeline:**Facilitate scalable projects through aggregation and early-stage development. * **Foster strong partnerships:**Strengthen cross-sector collaborations across sectors for coordinated decarbonization efforts.
* **Enable investments in low-income communities:**Focus on projects that deliver benefits to low-income communities. * **Raise awareness and inspire action:**Share success stories and best practices to inspire further action across the state. Each challenge or grant competition will have its own application process.
Please refer to the specific challenge or grant competition you wish to apply for to review its requirements. The State will announce additional Challenges as they are developed and released. Please check back here for updates on future Challenges.
If you have any questions or need help at any step of the process, please don’t hesitate to contact us at EGLE-OCE@Michigan. gov. Be sure to include “MI Healthy Climate Challenge” in the subject line to help us respond to your questions more efficiently. * [](https://www.
facebook. com/MichiganEGLE/) * [](https://twitter. com/MichiganEGLE) * [](https://www.
youtube. com/michiganegle) * [](https://www. instagram.
com/michiganegle/) * [](https://www. linkedin. com/company/michigan-department-of-environment-great-lakes-and-energy) MI Healthy Climate Challenge ## MI Voter Information Center Get personalized voter information on early voting and other topics.
If you are looking to make a difference and be part of something greater, learn more about careers at EGLEand**apply today**!
Explore current vacancies * Our mission, vision, and values * Internship opportunities * Search open positions&sort=PositionTitle%7CAscending) * LEARN MORE ABOUT EGLE ► * District office locations * ⚠ Report an environmental emergency * Environmental assistance center * MORE CONTACT INFORMATION ► * Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) * Nondiscrimination in EGLE programs * Office of Legislative Affairs * Policies and procedures * Regulations, laws, and rules Permits for lakes, streams, and wetlands Permits for lakes, streams, and wetlands * Contact permitting staff * Look up current permits * Projects on inland lakes & streams * Shoreline protection projects * MORE AND OTHER PERMITS ►
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: State and local governments, nonprofits, and other entities in Michigan. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
MI Healthy Climate Challenge is funded by Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE) Office of Climate and Energy. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Michigan. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program Phase I is sponsored by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The EPA SBIR Phase I Solicitation invites small businesses to submit proposals for projects addressing critical environmental challenges. Awards are for six months to demonstrate proof of concept. Key focus areas include Clean and Safe Water, Air Quality and Climate, Homeland Security, Circular Economy/Sustainable Materials, and Safer Chemicals.
Parkland Acquisitions and Renovations for Communities (PARC) Grant Program is a grant from the Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs that funds the acquisition and development of public parkland and outdoor recreational facilities. Eligible applicants include Massachusetts cities of any size and towns with 35,000 or more year-round residents that have an established park or recreation commission and an approved Open Space and Recreation Plan. Smaller communities may qualify under small town, regional, or statewide provisions. Awards reach up to $425,000, with a deadline of July 8, 2025. The program supports community green space, conservation, and recreational access across the Commonwealth.
Bats for the Future Fund is a grant from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF), in partnership with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, that funds efforts to slow or halt the spread of white-nose syndrome (WNS) disease and support the recovery of affected bat populations in North America. Funded projects may address disease treatment, habitat conservation, population monitoring, or public education strategies that contribute to bat species survival. Additional support is provided by NextEra Energy Resources through its charitable foundation. Eligible applicants include researchers, nonprofits, universities, and government agencies with relevant conservation expertise. Awards range from $50,000 to $250,000, with the 2025 deadline on August 14, 2025.
A agency-by-agency breakdown of SBIR funding for clean energy startups, from DOE and DOD to EPA and USDA, with positioning strategies that match your technology to the right program.
Read articleCongress passed the FY2026 energy funding bill with $3.1 billion for advanced nuclear reactors and dissolved the Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations. Here is what the reallocation means for energy grant seekers.
Read articleThe Maryland Clean Energy Center's Climate Catalytic Capital Fund opened May 13 with two application windows closing in late May and late June. Three product lines — bridge loans, lines of credit, feasibility grants — are designed to plug the gap left by IRA tax credit uncertainty.
Read article