Senate Democrats Propose Across-the-Board Cuts in Energy Innovation Budgets
March 07, 2011
July 19, 2011 |
Post Updated 7/20/2011
The 2012 Energy and Water Appropriations bill, passed on Friday by the House of Representatives, would cut federal energy innovation funding by 12 percent of the levels put in place by the FY11 Continuing Resolution, 37 percent below the White House's FY12 budget request. The bill would cut the Department of Energy (DOE)'s budget by $2.5 billion over FY2010 funding levels.
Overall, the House's plan would cut about $644 million from the combined budgets of the five major DOE offices engaged in energy innovation activities (see Figure 1 and Table 1 below). However, these new cuts are relative to FY11 budget levels, already diminished by spending reductions included in a Continuing Resolution passed by Congress in April to fund the government through the end of the year. All told, the 2012 Appropriations bill would see funding levels for the five core DOE energy innovation agencies tumble $1.4 billion below FY10 levels and a precipitous $3 billion below President Obama's budget request for FY12.
Figure 1, below, and accompanying Table 1, present the House budget in comparison to the funding levels for these offices in FY10, FY11, and previous Administration budget requests.
The legislation would cut the budgets of each of the DOE's major energy innovation offices, stripping the most funding from the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE), even after an amendment to the legislation passed late last week to restore $10 million to the EERE's solar research program. EERE's overall budget would fall to $1.3 billion dollars, 29 percent below FY11 Continuing Resolution funding levels, and a full 59 percent below the Administration's FY12 budget request.
Thanks to a last minute amendment passed by a single vote the budget for the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E), the DOE's flagship energy innovation program, was essentially restored to FY2011 levels, receiving $180 million in the House appropriations bill. However, those funding levels still fall 67 percent below the White House's 2012 budget request and even come in well below the Heritage Foundation's recent recommendation of $300 million for the key energy innovation agency. ARPA-E's $180 million budget allocation also leaves the agency critically underfunded compared to the $1.5 billion in eventual funding recommended by the American Enterprise Institute, Brookings Institution, and Breakthrough Institute in their report Post-Partisan Power or the $1 billion per year called for by the National Academies and originally envisioned in the bipartisan 2007 authorizing language that created the agency.