renewable energy offices diminished

While the rest of Washington was distracted by post-election chaos, the Department of Energy quietly dropped a bombshell. Last Thursday, the DOE released a new organizational chart that fundamentally erased offices dedicated to clean energy technologies. No press conference. No big announcement. Just a corporate-style restructuring that speaks volumes about the new administration’s priorities.

The once-prominent Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy? Gone. Well, not gone exactly—more like buried inside something called the “Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation.” Because nothing says innovation like minerals, right?

Once-critical clean energy programs now buried under bureaucratic mineral formations. Innovation reduced to rocks.

The offices focused on energy efficiency, state assistance, and manufacturing supply chains have vanished from the chart entirely. Poof.

Remember all that talk about modernizing America’s electric grid? The office responsible for that work has disappeared too. Seems the infrastructure we actually need to power the future isn’t as important as some might think. Projects already underway now exist in organizational limbo—if they exist at all.

This isn’t just moving boxes around on a chart. It’s dismantling the very infrastructure created to implement the Inflation Reduction Act and Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. Programs that received significant funding boosts under Biden are now being consolidated or eliminated entirely.

The new Critical Minerals office reports directly to Energy Secretary Chris Wright, bypassing usual channels. It’s run by Audrey Robertson, confirmed in October, who previously sat on the board of an oil and gas company founded by—you guessed it—Secretary Wright himself. Cozy arrangement.

Meanwhile, the department has been busy rescinding grants. At least $7.5 billion previously earmarked for clean energy projects has been clawed back in October alone. Billions in committed investments, gone in bureaucratic pen strokes. This follows the pattern established when the administration cancelled the UN Green Fund pledge worth $3 billion.

The message couldn’t be clearer. The renewable energy focus of the previous administration is being systematically dismantled, replaced with a very different vision for America’s energy future. The once forward-looking Office of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management has been rebranded as the Office of Hydrocarbons and Geothermal, clearly signaling the administration’s pivot back to traditional fuel sources.

References

* https://www.notus.org/energy/trump-energy-department-removes-clean-energy-offices-reorg

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