MPR News with Angela Davis

Getting to Green: Can Minnesota get to carbon-free energy?

Wind turbines in a field
Wind turbines spin at the Bent Tree Wind Farm near Hartland, Minn. on Thursday, July 12, 2023.
Ben Hovland | MPR News file

To slow a warming climate, Minnesota is changing where it gets electricity — shrinking the state’s reliance on fossil fuels and expanding the use of renewable energy.

Today, more than half of Minnesota’s electricity comes from solar, wind and hydropower. But challenges remain.

For the state to reach its ambitious goal of being carbon neutral by 2050, Minnesotans would need to embrace new ways of heating homes, traveling, powering the state’s factories and much more. And now there are questions about how President Donald Trump’s tariffs and opposition to wind and solar energy might affect an energy transition.

MPR News has been exploring a transition to a carbon-free economy in the series Getting to Green

MPR News correspondents Dan Kraker and Kirsti Marohn talk about the progress toward green energy and what the future holds.

Guests:

  • Allen Gleckner is the executive lead for policy and programs at Fresh Energy, a St. Paul-based clean energy nonprofit that develops decarbonization strategies to advance the clean energy economy. He focuses on technical innovation and policies that will lead to clean energy in the electric system.  

four people smiling in a broadcast studio
MPR News corespondants Dan Kraker (left) and Kirsti Marohn (center left) talk with  Allen Gleckner (center right), the executive lead for policy and programs at Fresh Energy, and Gabriel Chan (right), an associate professor at the University of Minnesota's Humphrey School of Public Affairs where he focuses on science, technology and environmental policy, in an MPR News studio in St. Paul on Tuesday.
Nikhil Kumaran | MPR News

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