Contractors / Dept of Energy & Environmental Protection
Dept of Energy & Environmental Protection
prime recipient of federal awards · UEI VZA5GCYZBJA7 ✓ from source
$712.2M
obligated · FY2025
10
funding agencies
75%
from Environmental …
1
states
99%
in Connecticut
1
industries
Obligations by year
≈ computed$148.9M
FY23
$313.6M
FY24
$712.2M
FY25
▲ 378%
since FY23
Where this money comes from
✓ from sourceFUNDING AGENCIES
DEPT OF ENERGY & ENVIRON
Environmental Protection
$0.5B
Energy
$0.1B
8 other agencies
$0B
Dept of Energy & Environmental Protection
$0.7B
FY2025 obligated
Biggest awards (total value)
awarded 2024$450M
awarded 2022$144.2M
awarded 2024$62.5M
awarded 2023$49.7M
awarded 2023$49.5M
awarded 2022$46.2M
awarded 2021$40.9M
Total value over each award’s life, for awards active in FY2025: a decades-long contract can exceed one year’s obligations above.
What it does (NAICS / PSC)
Clean Vessel Act$1.3M
Where the work lands
Connecticut✓ from source$704.6M
Competitors
Public Health, California Department of≈ computed$5.1M
Illinois Department of Human Service≈ computed$2.4M
Minnesota Department of Human Services≈ computed$2.4M
Pennsylvania Department of Health≈ computed$2.3M
Health, New Jersey Department of≈ computed$2.3M
Michigan Department of Health and Human Services≈ computed$2.2M
Colorado Department of Public Health & Environment≈ computed$2.1M
State of Wisconsin Department of Health Services≈ computed$1.8M
computed from shared NAICS, not a stated rivalry.
Corporate family
Single registration: no combined family.
🔎
Why the labels? The graph is only worth anything if the links are trusted. Facts taken straight from a federal filing are ✓ from source; anything we compute or infer (corporate parents, districts, competitors) is ≈ inferred and worded carefully, never asserted as fact.