Biden’s Push for Renewables Funding Trump’s Push To ‘Drill, Baby, Drill’

By James Varney

Looking to reorient U.S. energy policy toward fossil fuels and nuclear plants, President Trump has access to an enormous sum of money made available by an unlikely source: the Biden administration and congressional Democrats.

Legislation passed on party-line votes, most notably the $1 trillion Inflation Reduction Act, allocated hundreds of billions to the Department of Energy and the Environmental Protection Agency to fund various green energy projects. While some of that money has since been zeroed out by Republicans, more than $280 billion remains – allocated but unspent.

The Trump administration is wiping clear billions of dollars in loans made by the Biden administration and will streamline the federal grant process, while changing the name of the Loan Program Office to the Office of Energy Dominance Financing (EDF). Energy officials assert the department will rely on “common sense and data,” thereby eliminating the numerous charges of conflicts of interest associated with energy loans during the Biden era, which were highlighted in a recent report from the department’s inspector general. 

“The Biden administration had an agenda to decarbonize without asking the important questions of reliability and affordability,” said Greg Beard, the senior advisor to the EDF. “I wouldn’t describe our plan as an agenda, I would describe it as common sense. We’re grateful that Congress saw that the Trump Administration can have an important impact while being good stewards of taxpayer dollars.”

Billions ‘Rushed Out the Door’

Energy Secretary Chris Wright has been an outspoken proponent of oil, natural gas, and nuclear power for years, and quickly took an aggressive stance toward department loans. Last year, he canceled $3.7 billion in loans he said made no financial sense, and on Jan. 22, 2026, he announced $83 billion in Biden administration energy loans would be “restructured, revised or eliminated” and characterized the portfolio as part of the “Green New Scam.” 

“We found more dollars were rushed out the door of the Loan Programs Office in the final months of the Biden administration than had been disbursed in over 15 years,” Wright said.

That announcement came on the heels of Wright’s remarks at the World Economic Forum earlier this month, when he urged Great Britain and other European countries to turn away from expensive and dicey NetZero projects. That was the framework Biden and the Democrats sought to fund when passing bills via reconciliation without any Republican support, and Wright had urged Congress last year to keep the money available. 

Energy’s new lending agency says it will support critical minerals and hydrocarbon projects, including, in some cases, coal, as well as restarting or upgrading the nation’s existing nuclear energy sector – all things the Trump administration considers far more reliable sources of affordable energy than solar, wind, and other renewables. President Trump underscored this commitment last May when he issued an executive order on nuclear power. Since then, administration actions have included a $1 billion loan to restart a nuclear plant on the Susquehanna River in Pennsylvania, and a continuing $1.52 billion loan to the Palisades Nuclear Plant in Michigan.

The change in emphasis was welcomed by some experts who think the shift recognizes the supply and technological situation that exists in the energy sector today.

“Reality has signaled to the world it needs to have a recalibration when it comes to energy matters. There’s even some clarity restored to the IEA’s world energy outlook,” said Mark Mills, executive director of the National Center for Energy Analytics. “The world isn’t following the ‘NetZero’ blueprint, Europe is backpedaling, and one of the big stories going forward this year will be the who, when and where the Trump administration decides to put money.”

Warping the Market

Mills cautioned that the government’s resources are so great that massive loans in one sector could warp the market by discouraging private capital, but the EDF’s Beard told RealClearInvestigations his office is aware of that possibility, particularly with nuclear energy. In addition, any new nuclear project will take at least five years to deliver energy to the grid, and that is probably an optimistic timeline.

“EDF loans are all tied to specific companies and projects and are the subject of extensive due diligence to validate that projects meet EDF standards for project readiness and reasonable assurances that loan will be repaid,” Beard said. “There is never a scenario where we do not know where the money is going.

Those who believe global warming is an existential crisis have decried the Trump administration’s focus on plentiful energy sources that emit carbon, a process that the Energy Department’s new direction will continue. RCI reached out to prominent environmental groups such as the Sierra Club and the Environmental Defense Fund, but they did not respond. However, several environmentalists recently told the New York Times the results would prove catastrophic. 

“Emissions will be higher,” Dartmouth College associate professor Justin S. Mankin told the newspaper. “Trump’s greenhouse gas emissions will cause Trump’s heat waves, Trump’s droughts, Trump’s floods, and Trump’s wildfires.”

The Trump administration’s approach is also being criticized by some free-market energy experts who say the federal government should not be in the loan business at all, and would prefer the office be disbanded and the money spent elsewhere.

“We were excited to see that the Department of Energy is canceling $30 billion in green loans, but would like to see them go much further,” said Thomas Pyle, president of the Institute for Energy Research. “For more than a decade, we have called for Congress and DOE to end the loan program altogether. Absent that, President Trump to send a recission to Congress and announce that the money is going to pay down the deficit. The taxpayer should not be on the hook for commercial projects, regardless of their merit.”

Lingering Questions

As it reorients the federal government’s energy loan portfolio, the administration has revamped the way those loans are made in response to questions raised about the Biden administration’s practices. The Environmental Protection Agency – a regulatory agency that Biden, for the first time, made into a financial arm of his NetZero push – now appears to be out of the energy loan business, even as questions linger about that activity.

That process, which the EPA’s inspector general likened to the agency creating an “enormously complex investment bank” that would be difficult to monitor, involved roughly $27 billion doled out to nonprofits via its short-lived Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund and Solar For All programs. 

As RCI previously reported, familiar names in the Obama and Biden administrations were sprinkled throughout the nonprofits receiving the billions, which took another bizarre twist after Trump won the 2025 election. At that point, it was revealed the EPA had “parked” roughly $20 billion at Citibank, an unorthodox arrangement that took the cash out of Treasury Department control in a process one former Energy Department employee compared in an undercover video to “throwing gold bars off the Titanic.”

The Citibank money remains embroiled in litigation. Nonprofits suing for the money they were promised prevailed at the federal district court level, but that ruling was reversed by the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals last September in a decision that validated the agency’s decision to end the programs.

Four months after that, however, the EPA did not respond to a question about why the money has not been returned. Both court papers and background on the unique process the Biden administration used to give out the money are part of a new EPA webpage that even features a section entitled, “Self-dealing and Conflicts of Interest.”

Something similar appears to have been occurring at the Department of Energy. Around Christmastime, the department’s inspector general’s office released an audit report that found potential conflicts of interest among 20% of officials it reviewed at the Loan Program Office, which, under Biden, was slated to handle some $380 billion.

The IG launched its audit of some activities by DOE’s loan office in September 2024 in response to its meteoric rise under the Biden administration. In the past, the office had been a somewhat sleepy section of the agency that offered money “to companies considered risky by traditional lenders and investors” that focused on “innovative clean energy, advanced transportation, and tribal energy projects.” 

Biden-era legislation turbocharged the Loan Program Office. According to the report, it had $385 billion in new loan authority, a gigantic leap in its balance sheet thanks primarily to the Inflation Reduction Act. To handle the crush, the office had requested an additional 105 full-time federal employees from FY2022 through FY2024. There were 219 people working in the loan office when the audit began.

The auditors spent one year looking at 40 employees and $31 billion in loans – and found potential issues with eight of those employees. The report does not identify either the employees or the loans in question.

In general, the report revealed that loan department employees had failed to disclose prior management positions with firms seeking loans and, in some cases, had financial ties with loan office contractors. This included at least two “senior-level employees.”

These examples raised the potential for conflicts of interest and the “appearance of loss of impartiality in performing official duties,” an issue that arose in part because the office became increasingly sloppy in background work as its ranks swelled, according to the report.

Nothing Untoward?

Some of the report’s conclusions would appear to warrant further investigation. For example, auditors said “we found the employee authorized the interagency package concurrence for multiple loans worth billions of dollars, where their former employer was the financial advisor or investor for those loans. The employee had significant financial interest with this company.” Department officials told auditors there had been a “recusal” in that case, which in the end kept the employee from making any final decisions.

In another case, the report found “a supervisory loan specialist that had not been recused from matters involving their outside employer. Specifically, the employee was a company board member, and, as such, the financial interest of the company was imputed to the employee, creating a possible financial COI.”

The IG said these various errors occurred because the office did not follow standard ethics regulations and internal policies. Yet the precise details of what happened in the decision-making process, and whether the loans the IG examined were among those canceled by the Trump administration, remain unclear because neither the individuals nor the companies were named.

RCI spoke with liberal government watchdog groups and current Department of Energy officials who insisted the report did not conclude anything specifically untoward had occurred. The IG listed three recommendations, which the department says it has already implemented. These include a staff lawyer dedicated to ensuring compliance with ethics regulations and resolutions of “the potential conflicts identified during the audit.”

But the Trump administration seems more interested in spending the money secured by the Biden administration than it is in revisiting the previous administration’s missteps. 

“We have a clear vision with the right goals – to bring energy addition and not subtraction,” Beard said. “The office has restructured around a foundational mission to lower electricity prices, empower the private sector toA invest in the future, help win the AI race, strengthen American industry, lower electricity prices, and restore American energy dominance.”

This article was originally published by RealClearInvestigations and made available via RealClearWire.

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Gregory Woods
February 2, 2026 6:31 am

All too often, and not just here: No names, no consequences, no punishments,

February 2, 2026 6:42 am

The Trump administration needs to “follow the money”. That’s how you find the crooks.

And we want the crooks found and punished.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
February 2, 2026 7:07 am

‘We’, yes, but I don’t sense any urgency in that direction from the DoJ. Amazing how much of the Dem’s agenda can be accomplished with slim or even no majorities at all.

Reply to  Frank from NoVA
February 3, 2026 4:39 am

Many times the Democrats get help from a few ignorant Republicans with a personal agenda, pushing the good of the nation aside.

Any vote that advances the Democrat agenda harms the United States.

February 2, 2026 6:52 am

Why oh why will the Trump administration not just come out with it and say loud and clear that CO2 is not dangerous and is not the control knob for the climate so there is no need to waste any more money on chasing “net zero”?

Retiredinky
Reply to  Oldseadog
February 2, 2026 7:04 am

It is in the courts now.

Reply to  Retiredinky
February 2, 2026 7:32 am

What action is in the court?

William Howard
Reply to  Oldseadog
February 2, 2026 7:41 am

Zeldin is becoming a bigger disappointment every day – he should have reversed the endangerment finding on day one and stopped the chem trails on day 2

KevinM
Reply to  William Howard
February 2, 2026 8:06 am

I get that fighting the administrative state would be a gauntlet of delay and demotivation. Change at that organization probably involves retirement and other attrition.
Why would one want to end commercial air flight though?

Reply to  William Howard
February 2, 2026 8:45 am

Just guessing, but I think it’s not that simple. He has to have a review, ask for comments, etc.

John Hultquist
Reply to  Oldseadog
February 2, 2026 8:43 am

A “comments” period was extended to Sept 22, 2025. EPA received more than half-a-million public comments on its draft. The government shutdown occurred from October 1 to November 12 causing delays. If EPA is seen to have cut procedural corners and prejudged the outcome of the rulemaking there will be “entanglement” procedures {see you in court}. EPA typically takes at least a year between a proposed and final rule — in large part because of the need to respond to public comments. An early 2026 release date will be a historically fast pace for such rulemakings.
The Administration is working to get this done “real soon now.”

Reply to  John Hultquist
February 2, 2026 8:47 am

Do they have to respond to every comment? If so, that would be a way to bog it down if the other side tells its friends to bomb an agency with comments.

Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
February 2, 2026 10:32 am

If Mr. Trump can order an Aircraft Carrier Group to go to the Arabian Sea why can he not say that CO2 is not dangerous?

Reply to  Oldseadog
February 3, 2026 9:11 am

The US President is the Commander and Chief of the military.
It takes a bit more to untangle the web of a Federal Bueracracy.

John Endicott
Reply to  Oldseadog
February 4, 2026 10:23 am

Trump can say whatever he wants, but him just saying something doesn’t change the law or the rules of bureaucratic agencies. Getting bureaucratic rules changes takes time (lots and lots of time). This administration is in the process of getting the endangerment finding tossed out, but they need to be meticulous and cross every t and dot every i or activists will win the inevitable lawsuits against doing so.

strativarius
February 2, 2026 7:11 am

Miliband’s Push for Renewables Funding Already Deep Pockets.

NotChickenLittle
February 2, 2026 7:16 am

The Democrat platform has always been, give the teen-agers the car keys, and money for drugs and alcohol…

The mean Republicans ground the teen-agers, take away the car keys, cut off their allowance, and make them get jobs. Well it used to be that way, nowadays too many Republicans are also on the “Hate Trump” bandwagon.

William Howard
February 2, 2026 7:40 am

and the $2 billion to Stacy Abrams? to promote energy saving equipment – what a scam

KevinM
February 2, 2026 8:00 am

“Mills cautioned that the government’s resources are so great that massive loans in one sector could warp the market by discouraging private capital”
I wonder whether the same person said the same thing about the same policy applied to wind and solar?

Reply to  KevinM
February 4, 2026 3:37 am

They already have “warped the (energy) market.” To the great detriment of the country.

John Hultquist
February 2, 2026 8:24 am

Pierre Gosselin’s NoTricksZone post of 31 Jan has a report on the German approach that the Joe Autopen Administration was attempting to duplicate.
If money can be obtained to move Joe’s presidential library out of Room #13 of the Delaware Motel 6, it should become a national Funhouse Mirrors. 

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
February 2, 2026 8:50 am

“backpadaling from is trading with trumpland”

really? so they won’t mind not selling anything to America?

Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
February 3, 2026 4:44 am

Trump just made a deal with India to sell India oil from Venezuela and in return India will stop buying Russian oil, which is being used to finance the war in Ukraine.

CD in Wisconsin
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
February 2, 2026 10:09 am

MUNR,

From the Chat AI platform:

Quote:

High energy prices are dragging down Germany’s economy by raising industrial costs, reducing output, and worsening an already weak growth outlook. The country’s manufacturing‑heavy model—especially chemicals, metals, autos, and machinery—has been hit hardest, contributing to recessionary conditions and a loss of competitiveness in Europe.

Key Economic Effects
https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/svg/1f527.svg 1. Industrial Production Is Being Squeezed

  • Energy‑intensive sectors (chemicals, metals, foundries, automotive suppliers) face sharply higher electricity and gas costs.
  • Firms report that electricity prices are “just too high” to remain competitive, forcing some to scale back production or consider relocating.
  • The loss of cheap Russian gas after 2022 removed a major competitive advantage for German industry.

2. Economic Growth Has Stalled

  • Germany entered recession in 2023 and continued contracting in 2024, with further decline expected.
  • Forecasts show Germany growing more slowly than nearly all OECD countries.
  • High energy prices are one of the IMF‑identified factors reducing Germany’s potential output—its long‑term productive capacity.

3. Competitiveness Is Eroding

  • German manufacturers face a triple burden:
  • High energy costs
  • New tariffs (especially from the U.S.)
  • Strict EU climate policies
  • This combination is pushing many firms—especially small and medium‑sized enterprises—to cut investment or shift operations abroad.

https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/svg/26a0.svg
4. Structural Weaknesses Are AmplifiedHigh energy prices are interacting with deeper structural issues:

  • Overreliance on exports
  • Aging workforce
  • Stagnant productivity
  • These long‑standing challenges mean the energy shock hits Germany harder than other EU economies.

Bottom Line
Germany’s high energy prices are not just a temporary burden—they are accelerating a broader economic slowdown. The country’s industrial model, once powered by cheap gas and strong global demand, is under pressure from multiple directions. Without major changes in energy policy, industrial strategy, or productivity, Germany risks a prolonged period of weak growth and declining competitiveness.

***************

It is no doubt easy for renewables supporters (including you MUNR) to blame all of this on high fossil fuel costs rather than on the cost of transitioning to renewables. Let’s see what Chat AI says about that….

Quote:

Wind, solar, and the broader energy transition are contributing meaningfully—but not exclusively—to Germany’s economic troubles. The transition requires massive capital investment, raises electricity costs for industry in the short term, and interacts with other shocks (loss of Russian gas, weak global demand, aging infrastructure). The result is a drag on competitiveness, especially for Germany’s energy‑intensive manufacturing base.
Below is a clear, evidence‑based breakdown using the latest available data.

How the Energy Transition Is Burdening Germany’s Economy
1. Enormous Capital CostsA major German industry study estimates that current energy‑transition policies require up to €5.4 trillion in long‑term investment across energy, buildings, transport, and industry.

  • Annual private investment would need to more than double from ~€82 billion (2020–2024 average) to €113–316 billion per year by 2035.
  • These costs ultimately flow through to higher electricity prices, taxes, and grid fees.

This scale of investment is a structural headwind for an economy already struggling with low growth and weak productivity.

2. Higher Energy Prices for IndustryGermany has some of the highest industrial electricity prices in Europe, driven by:

  • Renewable‑energy surcharges (historically),
  • Grid expansion costs,
  • Backup gas capacity to stabilize intermittent wind/solar,
  • The loss of cheap Russian pipeline gas.

Energy‑intensive industrial output in 2025 remained ~17% below pre‑2022 levels, reflecting the pressure on chemicals, metals, and manufacturing.

This is a major factor behind Germany’s declining competitiveness.

3. Intermittency Costs and Infrastructure StrainWind and solar require:

  • Large‑scale grid expansion,
  • New transmission corridors from the windy north to industrial south,
  • Backup gas plants (20 GW planned) to stabilize supply.

These infrastructure needs add billions in annual costs and create policy uncertainty—both of which discourage industrial investment.

**************

I could go on here, but this comment is getting pretty lengthy, and I think the point I’m making is quite clear. This comment quite easily can apply to the UK as well under Starmer and Miliband.

One of the problems with hardcore ideologues like yourself MUNR (and Miliband among others) is that your stubborn self-certainty precludes you from seeing and acknowledging the damage you are doing to the economy. A lot of damage will be done before elections may bring this all to an end.

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
February 2, 2026 11:31 am

‘”The thing they are backpadaling from is trading with trumpland ”

and that will be a very poor decision for them.

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
February 2, 2026 11:56 am

lol….. a deal with  von der Leyen …. talk about heading down the gurgler. !!

This is China taking over the EU….

…. because the EU has become so weak…. because of von der Leyen 

—–

particularly like this line from one on the goons..

that the energy transition “will expand economic opportunities rather than limit them”.”

How’s that working out in Germany and the UK, both facing economic collapse because of their renewables push.

Leon de Boer
Reply to  bnice2000
February 3, 2026 4:25 am

Merkel tied Germany to Russian gas and the current leadership is determined to be even more stupid. As you said this ends one way with China being in control and holding all the levers.

Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
February 2, 2026 12:00 pm

And from the second link..  von der Leyen standing next to Bow-wow… where Miliband ??

Talk about DEAD-END streets !!

Leon de Boer
Reply to  MyUsernameReloaded
February 3, 2026 4:20 am

Neither of the two parties will be in power long enough to ever deliver on that.

See the timeline
100 GW of joint offshore wind capacity in the North Sea by 2050

They don’t have to worry about it until 2049 but they got there headline 🙂

Germany was stupid enough to rely on Russia gas and now they want to tie themselves to China … ROFL what could possibly go wrong.

February 2, 2026 9:21 am

Professor Mankin told the newspaper. “Trump’s greenhouse gas emissions will cause Trump’s heat waves, Trump’s droughts, Trump’s floods, and Trump’s wildfires.”
More like Trump derangement syndrome.

John Endicott
Reply to  Michael in Dublin
February 4, 2026 10:28 am

yeah, but that’s not a “will cause’ it’s an “already happened” as poor Professor Mankin is a prime example of how TDS rots the brain.

antigtiff
February 2, 2026 10:36 am

Trump needs to use Supercritical CO2 – CO2 is not a villain after all. It appears to be more efficient than using steam power.

antigtiff
February 2, 2026 10:43 am

Trump sez he is friends with Xi Jinping – I don’t think Xi is really his friend – maybe keep your friends close and enemies closer? China is home to Shadypanda malware – just say no to China made.

Reply to  antigtiff
February 3, 2026 4:53 am

Trump kind of irritates me when he starts talking about how well he gets along with murderous dictators, like Putin, and Xi, and the Mad Mullahs of Iran, and the North Korean dictator.

I know it is just a tactic he uses when dealing with these people, but it still irritates me, maybe because it is so obviously false.