Researchers Wanted to Understand Concerns With Batteries in Moss Landing, California. Their Funding Just Got Yanked
Among the many federal grants canceled by the Trump administration are two related to the community that hosts a huge energy storage facility.
The Trump administration has canceled outright or is trying to cancel billions of dollars in federal grants for research about energy and the environment.
Dustin Mulvaney, an environmental studies professor at San Jose State University, has the unfortunate distinction of being part of two federal grants canceled in the last month that deal with the same community: Moss Landing, California.
“It’s a huge loss,” he said.
Moss Landing hosts one of the largest battery energy storage projects in the world and has been harmed by a series of fires there, including a severe fire in January.
I spoke with him about the grants in part to get a sense of the deeper challenge happening right now. Across the county, researchers are facing an upheaval that likely means a loss of knowledge and jobs.
Mulvaney and his co-investigators received grants from both the National Science Foundation and the Environmental Protection Agency:
- Understanding the environmental justice implications of water and energy projects
Portland State University was the lead applicant for this $399,876 National Science Foundation grant, and San Jose State was going to do a portion of the research, focusing on Moss Landing. The goal was to better understand public controversy over water and energy projects at a time when global warming is driving a greater need to make changes to the water and energy sectors. Portland State received an email from the foundation on April 18 saying the grant was canceled because it “is not in alignment with current NSF priorities.”
- Probing community attitudes about energy storage projects
San Jose State was one of four universities doing the work on this $649,492 EPA grant. The research was aimed at understanding how to maximize the positive effects and minimize the negative effects of energy storage projects in underserved communities, including the area around Moss Landing. EPA said in a May 2 letter that it was canceling the grant because the research was “no longer consistent with EPA funding priorities.”
In February, the National Science Foundation grant turned up on the “woke list” of federally funded research that Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) characterized as objectionable because it is concerned with race, gender, social justice or environmental justice. Mulvaney knew then that cancellation was a strong possibility.
Once he learned the grants would end, he had to issue layoffs to four of his graduate students. They remain in the graduate program, but no longer have income as research assistants on these projects.
The loss of research jobs is a blow to the students, taking away opportunities for learning and robbing them of qualifications that would have helped them get jobs after graduation, he said.
“We’re known for elevating students from diverse backgrounds into higher-paying jobs,” he said. Having worked on a federal grant is “a feather in their cap that they won’t be able to have anymore.”
Asked why the grant was canceled, the National Science Foundation referred to a “frequently asked questions” page on its website explaining the office’s shift in priorities.
“Awards that are not aligned with NSF’s priorities have been terminated, including but not limited to those on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) and misinformation/disinformation,” the page says.
The research was important for understanding the lessons from Moss Landing. The community along Monterey Bay has experienced the transition away from fossil fuels in a way that many local residents now regard as harmful. In 2018, Vistra Corp. began work to develop a large battery energy storage plant inside the building that once housed part of a natural gas power plant.
Clean energy advocates had hoped the Moss Landing project would be a positive example of how batteries can stabilize the grid while reducing pollution that would have come from using fossil fuels. But reality has failed to live up to these hopes.
After the most recent fire, local officials and residents say pollutants from the plant have caused damage to soil and water and led to widespread reports of illness.
Mulvaney’s research focused on community attitudes about batteries and the transition away from fossil fuels. As the situation in Moss Landing changed, he shifted the inquiry to also cover attitudes about fire response and other aspects of what the community had experienced.
Researchers, policymakers and others can learn from what’s happened in Moss Landing and how it is shaping local viewpoints, he said. Some of this knowledge now will be lost.
Alida Cantor, a geography professor at Portland State University, led the team of applicants that got the EPA and National Science Foundation grants and partnered with Mulvaney and San Jose State, among others. She’s still trying to make sense of the abrupt end of years of work.
“This is not normal. This has never happened before to have grant cancellations on this scale,” she said, referring to all of the federal grants that got cut, not just hers.
Her group’s research is incomplete, but she’s gathered enough of it to draw some conclusions. She found that people can believe strongly in renewable energy and want to address climate change, but still end up opposing local renewable energy projects.
By understanding the reasons for opposition, the government and businesses can take steps to reduce the local harm of projects and do a better job of explaining the benefits.
“There are opportunities to do better by the community,” she said.
She is working with her university to explore appealing the cancellations, and she said Portland State has been supportive in a difficult time.
Mulvaney doesn’t feel like he or his students are getting enough support from San Jose State.
“There’s a cold indifference coming internally from my university,” Mulvaney said. “It’s been radio silence. It’s just me firing off emails to the administrators saying, ‘Where are you guys?’”
I reached out to San Jose State for comment and they did not respond before my Wednesday evening deadline.
Cover photo: A bystander watches a fire burn at the Vistra Corp. battery storage plant on Jan. 17 in Moss Landing, Calif. Credit: Doug Duran/Digital First Media/East Bay Times via Getty Images