Governor Mikie Sherrill • Lt. Governor Dr. Dale G. Caldwell |
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| For Immediate Release: | Contact: Alonza Robertson |
| Date: 03/18/2026 | 609-913-6237 |
Funds 26 Projects to Combat Deadly Extreme Heat and Lower Energy Demand
TRENTON, N.J. – March 18, 2026 – The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (NJBPU) today announced $5 million in grants to fund more than two dozen projects that will expand cooling infrastructure, reduce energy demand, and improve public health while strengthening climate resilience in the state's most heat-vulnerable communities.
The awards, issued through NJBPU's Urban Heat Island (UHI) Mitigation Program, span 10 municipalities statewide — with major investments concentrated in Newark, Camden, and Trenton, and additional projects in Paterson, Atlantic City, Elizabeth, Roselle, Egg Harbor City, Lakewood Township, and Pennsauken Township. Projects include tree planting along major street corridors, conversion of public buildings into resilience hubs, shade structures, water features, community gardens, and pop-up cooling oases, all designed to lower surface temperatures and cooling costs on the hottest days of the year.
"Extreme heat doesn’t just threaten public health, it drives up costs for New Jersey families — from energy bills to healthcare expenses, especially in urban areas that are hit the hardest. That’s why my administration is investing $5 million in smart, targeted projects to expand cooling infrastructure — from tree canopies to climate-resilient green spaces — to lower electricity costs and protect our most vulnerable communities from the dangers of extreme heat," said Governor Mikie Sherrill.
"The Urban Heat Island effect is an energy problem as much as it is a public health problem — and that's exactly why the Board of Public Utilities is in this space," said NJBPU President Christine Guhl-Sadovy. "When surface temperatures drop, so does peak electricity demand, and so do the bills that hit hardest in communities that can least afford them. These 26 projects are how we close that gap."
Urban Heat Islands: Health, Energy, and Equity
Urban heat islands (UHIs) are densely developed areas with limited green infrastructure that can run up to 8°F hotter than surrounding areas. The most severe impacts fall on low-income and BIPOC communities that have faced historic redlining and chronic disinvestment. Newark ranks as the second most intense heat island in the country, and New Jersey is among the three fastest-warming states in the nation.
UHIs worsen temperature and air quality, contributing to serious health risks in cities like Newark, Camden, and Trenton — which rank among the state's highest for childhood asthma emergency visits. Higher temperatures accelerate ozone formation and intensify air pollution, aggravating asthma, COPD, and cardiovascular disease. Urban trees and greening initiatives help counter these impacts by filtering harmful particulates, lowering temperatures, and improving air quality. Research shows sustained greening efforts, such as tree-planting, can reduce asthma-related emergency room visits, lower medical costs, and decrease missed school days.
Spotlight on Trenton, Camden, and Newark
Trenton will receive a $1 million award to plant approximately 700 trees along key street corridors in the North and West Wards, connecting homes to cooling centers, medical facilities, schools, and public housing. The city will also receive a $500,000 award to transform the former Hermitage Library into a resilience hub providing cooling relief and emergency resources during extreme heat events.
Camden will receive a $1 million award to redevelop Farnham Park with shade structures, improved youth recreation spaces, and expanded green areas. Additional community-based funding will support the "Blooming Bus Stops" initiative, adding shade trees, seating, and amenities at up to 20 bus stops in North Camden.
Newark will receive a $500,000 award to redevelop Hennessey Street Park into a climate-resilient community space in the Ironbound neighborhood, adding cooling infrastructure, trees, and emergency cooling amenities. Additional community-based projects will install shade structures and hydration stations at community gardens and deliver tree planting in neighborhoods disproportionately affected by extreme heat.
Full List of Awardees and Projects
Category 1 – Comprehensive UHI Interventions in Public Spaces (up to $1 million each)
● City of Trenton – Trenton North and West Wards Tree Arteries Project ($1,000,000)
● City of Camden – Farnham Park Redevelopment ($1,000,000)
Category 2 – Cooling the Built Environment / Resilience Hubs (up to $500,000 each)
● City of Trenton – Hermitage Library Resilience Hub ($500,000)
● Pennsauken Township – Elm Avenue Resilience Hub ($500,000)
● City of Newark – Firefighters Memorial Park Climate-Resilient Community Space ($500,000)
● Housing Authority of the City of Elizabeth – Bayway Community Center Cool Roof and Heat Resilience Project ($500,000)
Category 3 – Urban Micro-Climate Interventions (up to $50,000 each)
● New Jersey Conservation Foundation (Trenton) – Green Streets to Battle Monument Intermediate School ($50,000)
● Isles, Inc. (Trenton) – H2Grow – Bellevue ($50,000)
● Trenton Artworks, Inc. (Trenton) – Trenton Heat Resilience Garden ($50,000)
● Passage Theatre Company (Trenton) – Cool Theatre Passageways ($50,000)
● Center for Environmental Transformation (Camden) – East Camden Community Heat Preparedness ($50,000)
● Neighborhood Collaborative / Camden Urban Agriculture Collective (Camden) – Blooming Bus Stops ($50,000)
● Greater Newark Conservancy (Newark) – Water-Enhanced Newark Community Gardens and Green Spaces ($50,000)
● Newark Science and Sustainability, Inc. (Newark) – Newark SaS Shade Infrastructure Project ($50,000)
● Rabbit Hole Farm (Newark) – Newark Cooling Improvements ($50,000)
● Project for Empty Space (Newark) – Newark Grounds Art Canopies and NIGHT FEST Markets ($100,000)
● FARD United (Newark) – Urban Heat and Community Safety Initiative ($50,000)
● City Green (Paterson) – Tree Canopy Expansion in City Green Learning Garden ($50,000)
● One Ocean County, Inc. (Lakewood Township) – John Patrick Sports Complex Cooling Garden ($50,000)
● Ducktown Neighborhood CDC (Atlantic City) – Ducktown Cooling Corridor Pop-Up Oasis ($50,000)
● Key Recreation, Inc. (Egg Harbor City) – Buffalo Avenue Playground Urban Heat Relief Project ($50,000)
● Groundwork Elizabeth (Elizabeth and Roselle) – Urban Heat Mitigation Through Native Tree Canopy Expansion ($50,000)
Program Background and Next Steps
The Board established the UHI Mitigation Program in 2025 with a $5 million budget from the New Jersey Clean Energy Fund to support overburdened municipalities and community-based organizations in implementing publicly accessible, energy-efficient cooling infrastructure. In this first funding round, the program received 43 complete applications requesting $12.35 million. Staff recommended 26 projects based on scoring rubrics that prioritized municipal distress, energy burden, heat vulnerability, and alignment with state climate and energy plans.
Awardees will have two to three years to complete projects and must submit regular financial and performance reports to the Board. The Center for Urban Policy Research at Rutgers University will provide technical assistance to help awardees design, implement, and monitor cooling interventions.
The UHI Mitigation Program advances Governor Mikie Sherrill's agenda to pair aggressive climate action with investments that directly improve public health, affordability, and quality of life in overburdened communities.
About the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities
The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities is a state regulatory agency mandated to ensure safe, adequate, and proper utility services at reasonable rates. NJBPU oversees natural gas, electricity, water, wastewater, telecommunications, and cable television, and is responsible for monitoring utility services, responding to consumer complaints, and investigating utility accidents. Learn more at www.nj.gov/bpu.