UTILITIES: The former CEO of Jacksonville, Florida’s municipal utility is sentenced to four years in prison on wire fraud and conspiracy charges in an alleged scheme to receive tens of millions in bonuses while privatizing the utility. (Florida Times-Union)

ALSO:

TRANSITION: Kentucky is building seven new high-ground neighborhoods mostly on former coal mines as part of its response to devastating floods, but advocates worry they may not be affordable and attractive enough for residents to move there. (WKYU)

SOLAR: 

ELECTRIC VEHICLES: Hyundai wants to amend its permits to allow for gasoline storage and fuel filling equipment at its Georgia “metaplant,” suggesting the automaker intends to produce hybrid as well as electric vehicles. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

NUCLEAR: A company begins construction of a low-level demonstration nuclear reactor in eastern Tennessee, the first non-light-water reactor to be permitted in the U.S. in more than 50 years. (Knoxville News Sentinel)

CLIMATE: 

OIL & GAS: Key pipelines linking the Permian Basin to a Texas port are more than 90% full, threatening to bottleneck oil and gas exports. (Bloomberg)

GEOTHERMAL: A $100 million U.S. EPA grant will fund energy projects in Arkansas, including drilling of geothermal wells to replace natural gas at an airport in Little Rock. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, subscription)

EFFICIENCY: Eleven rural Kentucky businesses receive a total of $670,000 in federal grants to boost their energy efficiency, with most of that going to solar installation. (WEKU)

GRID: 

More from the Energy News Network: Midwest | Southeast | Northeast | West

Mason has worked as a journalist since 2001, covering Appalachian communities and the issues that affect them. He compiles the Southeast Energy News digest. Mason previously worked as a wildlife biologist before moving into journalism by freelancing at Coast Weekly in Monterey, California, before taking an internship in 2001 at High Country News. He wrote for the Enterprise Mountaineer in western North Carolina and the Roanoke Times in western Virginia before going freelance in 2012. His work has appeared in Southerly, Daily Yonder, Mother Jones, Huffington Post, WVPB’s Inside Appalachia and elsewhere. Mason was born and raised in Clifton Forge, Virginia, and now lives with his family and a small herd of goats in Floyd County, Virginia.