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Informing the Iegitive diebate since 1914

Updated January 27, 2023

DOE Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
FY2023 Appropriations

The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE's) Office of
Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) is
responsible for enabling renewable energy and end-use
energy efficiency technology development and
implementation. Other activities include issuing grants for
home energy efficiency and state planning, establishing
minimum energy conservation standards for appliances and
equipment, and providing technical support.
EERE collaborates with industry, academia, national
laboratories, and others to conduct and support research,
development, demonstration, and deployment activities.
EERE also manages programs that support state and local
governments, tribes, and schools. Further, EERE oversees
and supports the research and infrastructure of the National
Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)-the only U.S.
national laboratory solely dedicated to researching and
developing renewable energy and energy efficiency
technologies.
EERE Appropriations
EERE receives funding through the annual Energy and
Water Development (E&W) appropriations bill. Under the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, P.L. 117-328,
EERE received $3.46 billion for FY2023, approximately
$260 million more than the enacted FY2022 level of $3.20
billion (the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2022; P.L.
117-103).
In addition, EERE received funding through the
Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA; P.L. 117-58).
IIJA provided a total of $16.26 billion in additional
emergency appropriations for EERE, of which $8.21 billion
was directed to FY2022 and $2.22 billion to FY2023 (see
Table 1). EERE also received $17.96 billion in additional
funding through P.L. 117-169 (often referred to as the
Inflation Reduction Act, or IRA), enacted on August 16,
2022. The IRA funding is available from FY2022 to remain
available through FY2026, FY2027, FY2029, or FY2031
depending on the provision.
Executive Branch Actions
For FY2023, the Biden Administration requested $4.02
billion for EERE-roughly a 26% increase from the
FY2022 enacted level of $3.20 billion. Of the FY2023
request for EERE, 5.6% was to be reserved for program
direction. Including current EERE programs that the request
proposed to be funded through new, separate offices (see
below), a total of $4.94 billion was requested for all EERE
programs, a 54% increase from the FY2022 enacted
amount.

Proposed funding increases were aimed at decarbonization
activities in the electricity sector, transportation, energy-
intensive industries, and agriculture sector. Other priorities
included energy justice efforts under Justice40, an initiative
of the Biden Administration in accordance with Executive
Order 14008 to prioritize 40% of funding of certain federal
investments for disadvantaged communities.
The request also proposed realigning funding to reflect new
offices, functionally transferring some programs from
within EERE to the new Office of Manufacturing and
Energy Supply Chains; Office of Federal Energy
Management Programs; and Office of State and
Community Energy Programs. As a result, the EERE
request did not include funding for certain programs such as
Weatherization, which was included in the $727 million
request for the new Office of State and Community Energy
Programs. Under the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2023, P.L. 117-328, the proposed offices were separated
from Energy Efficiency, but not from EERE.
LegisLitive Actions
Congressional interest in EERE funding included the level
of appropriations and which activities should receive
support. The House Appropriations Committee approved
the FY2023 Energy and Water Development funding bill on
June 28, 2022 (H.R. 8255, H.Rept. 117-394). The bill was
combined in a minibus with six other appropriations bills
(H.R. 8294), which passed the House on July 20, 2022.
The chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee's
Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development
introduced an FY2023 Energy and Water Development
appropriations bill July 28, 2022 (S. 4660), and posted a
draft explanatory statement on the Appropriations
Committee website. The Appropriations Committee's vice
chairman criticized S. 4660 and other FY2023
appropriations bills introduced by some Appropriations
Committee leaders.
The Senate-introduced bill and the House-passed bill would
have provided overall funding increases for EERE above
the FY2022 enacted level but below the Administration's
FY2023 request.
The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 (P.L. 117-328,
Division D) was signed by President Biden on December
29, 2022. EERE received $3.46 billion for FY2023, which
was below the funding levels in the original House-passed
bill and Senate-introduced bill. Under EERE, the enacted
bill provides funding for crosscutting initiatives and for
programs in sustainable transportation, renewable energy,
energy efficiency, manufacturing and energy supply chains,

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