What remains in this iteration will have some direct benefits for state and local entities, according to Brian Oakley, Executive Vice President, Public Infrastructure, JLL. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act includes $7.5 billion in grants for governments to consider public-private partnerships for electric vehicle charging stations, among many other investments.
“We’ve seen an influx of cities reaching out for guidance to implement changes across their real estate portfolios,” Oakley says. “The bill includes provisions for local governments to hire experts in areas like charging stations, solar energy and renewable energy. Recognizing the need for charging stations is a great first step. That kind of deployment is a major infrastructure challenge.”
Climate change, airports and public transit
There are significant dollars to be invested in hard infrastructure like roads, bridges, and tunnels.
But the $1.2 trillion bipartisan measure doesn’t stop there. It includes:
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US$47 billion in climate resilience measures to protect buildings from the storms and fires that result from climate change
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$65 billion to repair and protect the electric grid, build new transmission lines for renewable power and develop nuclear energy and “green hydrogen” and carbon capture technologies
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$39 billion to continue and expand current public transit programs, including help that allows cities and states to buy zero- or low-emission buses
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$66 billionto fix Amtrak and build out its service along the Northwest Corridor, in addition to building tens of millions for high-speed rail and other commuter rail
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$7.5 billion to build electric vehicle charging stations;
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$25 billionto repair airports to reduce congestion and emissions, encouraging the use of low-carbon flight technology
How the infrastructure bill can begin funding state and local projects - JLL Australia
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