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1st net-zero emissions port of entry to break ground in AZ

YUMA — A $308 million effort to modernize and expand Arizona’s second-busiest non-commercial port broke ground in San Luis on Tuesday, nearly 40 years after the port was built. That is scheduled.

Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs and Senator Mark Kelly (D-Arizona), along with officials from the U.S. General Services Administration and U.S. Customs and Border Protection, attend a groundbreaking ceremony at the San Luis 1 Land port of entry. It is expected to be.

The project will significantly increase the port’s vehicle and pedestrian inspection capacity, while reducing waiting times and facilitating the cross-border economy. The initiative would replace the port’s aging infrastructure and outdated facilities with funding from bipartisan infrastructure and anti-inflation laws.

“This is a generational investment,” said GSA Director Robin Carnahan. “Trade has increased dramatically over the last 30-40 years, but the infrastructure that enables that trade to cross borders effectively has not kept pace.

About $100 million of the Control Inflation Act funds will be used to introduce a number of sustainability features, making it the country’s first net-zero land port of entry. A net-zero building is a building where clean energy generated on-site offsets the total energy used, resulting in a net energy consumption of zero.

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