[Senate Hearing 119-64]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
S. Hrg. 119-64
ENERGY AND WATER DEVELOPMENT
APPROPRIATIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2026
=======================================================================
HEARINGS
before a
SUBCOMMITTEE OF THE
COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS UNITED STATES SENATE
ONE HUNDRED NINETEENTH CONGRESS
FIRST SESSION
ON
H.R. 6938
AN ACT MAKING APPROPRIATIONS FOR ENERGY AND WATER DEVELOPMENT
FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDING SEPTEMBER 30, 2026, AND FOR
OTHER PURPOSES
__________
Department of Defense--Civil
Department of Energy
Department of the Interior
__________
Printed for the use of the Committee on Appropriations
[GRAPHIC NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]
Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.govinfo.gov
__________
U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE
60-258 PDF WASHINGTON : 2026
COMMITTEE ON APPROPRIATIONS
SUSAN M. COLLINS, Maine, Chair
MITCH McCONNELL, Kentucky PATTY MURRAY, Washington, Vice
LISA MURKOWSKI, Alaska Chair
LINDSEY GRAHAM, South Carolina RICHARD J. DURBIN, Illinois
JERRY MORAN, Kansas JACK REED, Rhode Island
JOHN HOEVEN, North Dakota JEANNE SHAHEEN, New Hampshire
JOHN BOOZMAN, Arkansas JEFF MERKLEY, Oregon
SHELLEY MOORE CAPITO, West Virginia CHRISTOPHER A. COONS, Delaware
JOHN KENNEDY, Louisiana BRIAN SCHATZ, Hawaii
CINDY HYDE-SMITH, Mississippi TAMMY BALDWIN, Wisconsin
BILL HAGERTY, Tennessee CHRISTOPHER MURPHY, Connecticut
KATIE BOYD BRITT, Alabama CHRIS VAN HOLLEN, Maryland
MARKWAYNE MULLIN, Oklahoma MARTIN HEINRICH, New Mexico
DEB FISCHER, Nebraska GARY C. PETERS, Michigan
MIKE ROUNDS, South Dakota KIRSTEN E. GILLIBRAND, New York
SUSAN M. COLLINS, Maine, (ex JON OSSOFF, Georgia
officio)
Elizabeth McDonnell, Staff Director
Evan Schatz, Minority Staff Director
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Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development
JOHN KENNEDY, Louisiana, Chair
MITCH McCONNELL, Kentucky PATTY MURRAY, Washington Ranking
LISA MURKOWSKI, Alaska RICHARD J. DURBIN, Illinois
LINDSEY GRAHAM, South Carolina JEFF MERKLEY, Oregon
JOHN HOEVEN, North Dakota CHRISTOPHER A. COONS, Delaware
CINDY HYDE-SMITH, Mississippi TAMMY BALDWIN, Wisconsin
BILL HAGERTY, Tennessee MARTIN HEINRICH, New Mexico
KATIE BOYD BRITT, Alabama GARY C. PETERS, Michigan
MIKE ROUNDS, South Dakota JON OSSOFF, Georgia
Professional Staff
Melissa Burnison
Bill McNavage
Kathleen Williams
Aaron Golner (Minority)
Laura Powell (Minority)
Amanda Wyma-Bradley (Minority)
Maria Calderon (Minority)
Administrative Support
Cole Spiller
C O N T E N T S
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HEARINGS
Wednesday, May 21, 2025
Page
Department of Energy: Office of the Secretary.................... 1
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Department of Defense--Civil: Department of the Army; Corps of
Engineers--Civil............................................... 71
Department of the Interior: Bureau of Reclamation................ 80
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BACK MATTER
List of Witnesses, Communications, and Prepared Statements....... 105
Subject Index.................................................... 107
Department of Defense--Civil................................. 107
Department of the Army................................... 107
Corps of Engineers--Civil................................ 107
Department of Energy......................................... 107
Office of the Secretary.................................. 107
Department of the Interior................................... 108
Bureau of Reclamation.................................... 108
ENERGY AND WATER DEVELOPMENT
APPROPRIATIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2026
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 2025
U.S. Senate,
Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations,
Washington, DC.
The subcommittee met at 2:30 p.m. in room SD-124, Dirksen
Senate Office Building, Hon. John Kennedy (chairman) presiding.
Present: Senators Kennedy, Murkowski, Hoeven, Hagerty,
Britt, Murray, Merkley, Coons, Baldwin, Peters, and Ossoff.
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Office of the Secretary
STATEMENT OF HON. CHRISTOPHER WRIGHT, SECRETARY
opening statement of senator john kennedy
Senator Kennedy. All right. Let us get started, folks. I am
going to call the Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development
of the Appropriations Committee to order.
With us today is Secretary Chris Wright, who is going to
talk to us about the proposed Trump's ``skinny budget,'' if you
will.
I am just going to have a couple of preliminary comments,
and then I am going to turn to the Vice Chair of the entire
committee and the Ranking Member of the subcommittee to make
remarks.
Look, we all know about the portfolio of the Department of
Energy. It is a smorgasbord, everything from nuclear weapon
stockpiles, to research, to supercomputing, to artificial
intelligence. There are two things, Mr. Secretary I want to
point out in my opening statement that got my attention.
The spending at your Department is not your fault, but it
is unsustainable. It is simply unsustainable. If you take a
look and compare the current budget of the Department of
Energy, just go back a few years to fiscal year 2021. In fiscal
year 2021, the Department's budget was roughly $61 billion.
Today, it is roughly $160 billion. That is a what, 161 percent
increase? That is pretty dramatic, and I know your proposed
skinny budget is addressing some of that.
I hope we can address the spending with a scalpel, not a
meat axe, but we are going to have to address it. I will also
point out, let us see that other chart, the Inspector General,
as you have probably read the report, Chris, the report came
out in November of 2024. The Inspector General identified $1
billion in what it called wasteful spending, unsupportive
spending, or fraudulent spending. That is a lot of taxpayer
money.
So, I am looking forward to this today. I am pretty much an
all-of-the-above energy type guy. I will support any form of
energy that is affordable, that is efficient, that is
accessible. That includes renewables. In my judgment, President
Biden's administration concentrated too exclusively, almost
exclusively, I should say--on renewables. We have spent a lot
of money, I don't see that we have gotten the results. The
average electricity bill in America for the average American
family over the past 4 years is up 28 percent. That is the
first thing they care about. We have got to address it.
And I hope we can today, Mr. Secretary, talk very
specifically about what programs are working and what programs
aren't. Because what has happened in the past, since I have
been on this committee, is we get together as a subcommittee,
we get our topline numbers, our staffs go off, the Democratic
staffs and the Republican staffs, go off and negotiate. And at
least on my side of the aisle, the staff comes back and says:
Good news, spending is only going to go up 6 percent.
Well, those days are gone, as far as I am concerned. That
is just not acceptable to me, not when you have had a 161
percent increase.
And with that, I will turn to the Vice Chair of the
Appropriations Committee and the Ranking Member of the Energy
and Water Development Subcommittee, my good friend Senator
Patty Murray.
statement of senator patty murray
Senator Murray. Thank you very much, Senator Kennedy.
Looking forward to working with you on this committee.
Senator Kennedy. Same here.
Senator Murray. I am pleased to serve as the Ranking Member
of this important subcommittee, and I do hope we can continue
our track record of writing bipartisan spending bills that make
the crucial investments in our communities that we need.
You know, DOE's (Department of Energy) work is really far-
reaching. It has major implications for how much families spend
on energy bills, on the reliability of our energy grid, whether
we lead the world in clean energy, AI, quantum computing, and
our national security, and our nuclear waste cleanup program.
In my home State of Washington, as you know, we see all of
this firsthand, at the Bonneville Power Administration, which
provides power to families across our region; at the Pacific
Northwest National Lab, which is pioneering cutting-edge
research; and at Hanford, where we have the biggest nuclear
cleanup site in the country, and a moral and legal obligation
that we can never shortchange.
So, we must give the programs DOE manages their due in
terms of funding and in terms of oversight necessary to make
sure that funding actually gets to our communities. But I
believe those goals are in jeopardy because of some of your
actions over the last few months, like a truly sweeping funding
freeze, unprecedented contract cancellations, mass staffing
reductions, and uncertainty that is hurting communities across
our country.
Now, Secretary Wright, my colleagues and I have been
pressing you for information, on staffing, on funds signed into
law you are holding up, or straight up cancelling, and more,
and I have only received two responses so far, both of them
yesterday, clearly to get ahead of today's hearing. And
response, I have to say, is being charitable, because you did
not really provide any answers in those.
Last week, you told the House you have ignored basic
inquiries from lawmakers because you are too busy, and you
mentioned you don't want to spend time on false premises. So, I
thought we could save some time today by debunking a few of
those false premises.
It is false for you to say less than 1,000 people have left
since you took over. We know over 3,500 DOE employees have
taken the so-called buyout that you offered, and we know you
fired 500 more. It is false for you to say no contracts have
been cancelled, when you have plainly cancelled electric
vehicle and low-income energy assistance grants in Colorado,
one example. And it is false for you to say there are no unpaid
invoices, when we have heard from organizations still waiting
on payments, including hydrogen hubs, which have unpaid
invoices.
Now, in addition to ignoring requests from Congress, your
fiscal year 2025 spend plan, required by law, is completely
inadequate. That is really critical, Mr. Secretary. It is a
critical document for us to understand how you are spending, or
how you are blocking, or cancelling billions of dollars
Congress, all of us, provided for critical projects across the
country.
I have heard you say you are merely conducting a review, as
if that somehow makes it okay. Call it whatever you want. The
bottom line is the money is not moving. And as a former
businessman, you know perfectly well that uncertainty alone has
a massive cost. Jobs are being lost because of your actions.
Private investment in critical energy projects is being
cancelled, delayed, threatened to the tune of $71 billion so
far this year.
And as electric prices hit record highs, you are halting
progress on investments that would lower people's bills.
Meanwhile, you are letting thousands of critical staff go,
encouraging folks to leave, with no regard for if they do their
work well, or if their work is important. I still don't know
how you could do something as crazy as try to fire Bonneville
Power Administration workers in the name of efficiency. Those
are literally people who keep the lights on, and they are not
even paid by taxpayer dollars.
Now, I know that eventually you reversed those firings, but
the fact that they happened at all was, really, to me, a first
in a parade of red flags.
Now, we are here today to talk about another red flag. That
is your budget that completely guts the non-defense half of
your mission. Overall, you want to slash $20 billion from DOE's
science and energy programs. Your budget proposes ripping 75
percent out of the energy efficiency and renewable energy
program and shuttering important clean energy and manufacturing
programs. I don't know who is telling you people want to pay
higher electric bills.
Your budget slashes $1.1 billion from the Office of
Science. Who is telling you that we should cede ground to China
in the race for innovation, and lay off scientists at our
national labs?
Your budget cuts $15 billion from programs we created in
the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, hydrogen hubs, battery
storage, advanced manufacturing, supply chains, and other
programs to lower our energy costs. Who told you we don't want
those manufacturing jobs? Who told you we don't want to
strengthen our energy protection and reduce our dependence on
foreign oil?
Well, here is what I will tell you. If we were to follow
through with this disastrous budget, the only energy that we
would save is from the lights that go out at factories across
the country. Those lights are going to go off as China swoops
in to take the lead in the technologies that will define the
21st century.
I don't see any efficiency in this budget, but I do see a
heavy cost. And that is the cost you are going to pass on to
our constituents in the form of higher electric bills, gas
bills, and more power outages. Not to mention the cost when
manufacturing moves elsewhere and we have to pay Trump's absurd
tariffs for technology we could and should be making right
here, or the cost to our country: discoveries we could be
making here, jobs we could be creating right here, goods we
could be making here and selling across the world.
Instead, it feels like you want to gift-wrap the future and
hand it to China. Your budget also, by the way, flat funds the
Hanford cleanup. That has serious repercussions, they recently
finalized milestones they have to meet on the high-level waste
mission. Flat funding means the only way to hit those targets
is to pull funding from other priorities, which would have
ripple effects for workers carrying out critical projects
across the site and ultimately would delay remediation along
the Columbia River. That is unacceptable. We can't rob Peter to
pay Paul.
Mr. Secretary, I know you talk about energy abundance, but
talk is cheap. Doing that work actually takes real investments.
I think you know that. Investments you are now ripping to
shreds. So, I personally want to see less talk and more money
getting out the door the way Congress wrote and intended.
You know, there is common ground in this space. I know we
found it before. The very last bill Chair Kennedy and I wrote
together passed out of this committee unanimously, and I want
to see us do it again, because this is genuinely important
work.
Now, before I conclude, I would be remiss if I did not
address the outrageously corrupt news we got last week on the
Army Corps Work Plan. This administration is ripping away
hundreds of millions of dollars from projects that were in the
House bill and in the Senate Energy and Water fiscal year 2025
bills, and funding other projects with that money that were not
funded in any bill that we approved. This includes scrapping
funds for the Howard Hanson Dam in Washington State. This is a
vital project. It has to get done.
I want you to know, I am going to keep working with you,
Mr. Chairman, to get that done, because this committee and the
subcommittee have come a long way together to fund these vital
projects to communities across our country. And I know no
member appreciates any administration playing games with
communities for political reasons, as is the case with that
work plan that was released last week. It is brazen abuse, pure
and simple. And I will keep digging into how that decision was
made, demanding answers, and speaking out about this, and
fighting for my State of Washington.
Now, before I turn it over back to you, Chair Kennedy, I do
want to end by recognizing Doug Clapp. He was my former clerk,
a longtime staffer on this subcommittee, and a staffer in my
personal office before that. Doug started on this committee in
2007, 2 decades ago, and has left his mark on our Nation's laws
time and again: championing oversight and good governance,
advancing environmental cleanup work including at the Hanford
site, fighting for and securing the vital investments this
subcommittee makes, as well as working in my personal office on
the Wild Sky Wilderness Act and many other issues important to
my constituents.
He was someone who understood that when we work together,
we can make powerful investments that show government can do
good in people's lives. I am really grateful for his years of
service. I want to wish him the best as he starts his next
chapter. I am also grateful he left behind not just a strong
legacy but a great team and a subcommittee so well prepared to
continue this work. And I thank all of them.
Senator Kennedy.
Senator Kennedy. Thank you, Senator.
Mr. Secretary, we will turn to you next. I can assure you
we will give you plenty of time, in addition to your opening
statement, to answer any questions or any charges from this
committee. I was delighted when the President appointed you.
When we were talking before the committee began, I am not
kidding, I am reading your book, and it is fascinating. Some of
it I don't understand, I may have to call you and get you to
explain it to me, but it is very accessible. And when the
President appointed you, I was so excited that we would have
someone running the Department of Energy who has such a deep
background in the subject.
And with that, the floor is now yours. Tell us what we need
to know, Mr. Secretary. And welcome to all of your staff, I
assume they are all sitting there on the front row?
summary statement of hon. christopher wright
Secretary Wright. Yes. Yes. Great. Thanks. The team behind
me, they will be here after the meeting too if we have
questions or follow-up.
Senator Murray, if you have unpaid invoices, please bring
them to us right now. We pay our bills. I am not aware of any
unpaid invoices. If you know of some, please deliver to us.
Senator Murray. We have the receipts up there.
Secretary Wright. Please deliver them, and we will take
care of them. We pay our bills. We follow the law.
Thank you, Senator. Yes, energy is a lifelong mission and
passion for me, and nothing will change that, and I am thrilled
to be here in this position.
So, Chairman Kennedy, Ranking Member Murray, and Members of
the Committee, it is an honor to appear before you today as
Secretary of Energy, to discuss the President's fiscal year
2026 Budget Request for the Department of Energy. I want to
commend this committee for its long-standing commitment to
energy policy and the mission of the Department.
Energy is the backbone of civilization. It is the essential
catalyst of human progress, enabling everything we do,
everything. From the lights in our homes, the heat in our
homes, the process heat in our factories, and the innovation in
our national laboratories. I have dedicated my life to
increasing access to energy and bettering human lives, and I am
thrilled to carry my work forward at the Department of Energy.
My priorities for the Department are clear: to unleash a
golden era of American energy dominance, strengthen our
national security, and lead the world in innovation. A reliable
and abundant energy supply is the foundation of a strong and
prosperous nation. When America leads in energy, we lead in
prosperity, security, and human flourishing.
America has a historic opportunity to secure our energy
systems, lead the world in scientific and technological
innovation, maintain and strengthen our weapons stockpile, and
meet Cold War legacy waste commitments. The Department of
Energy will advance these critical missions while cutting red
tape, increasing efficiency, unleashing innovation, and
ensuring we are better stewards of taxpayer dollars.
The President's fiscal year 2026 budget will ensure
taxpayer resources are allocated appropriately and cost-
effectively. This budget will return DOE to its core mission of
advancing energy innovation and global competitiveness through
research and development. We will invest DOE's resources in
sources and technologies that support affordable, reliable, and
secure energy and provide a return on investment for the
American taxpayers.
Achieving this vision means fully leveraging the resources
that have powered our country for generations. The United
States is blessed with an abundance of coal, oil, and natural
gas, and the Trump administration is committed to using them to
meet growing energy needs of the American people. Every one of
these resources was unleashed through the world-changing power
of American innovation.
Our national labs are the engine that drives research and
development to expand our energy dominance. When it comes to
our national labs, we are undeniably capable of doing more with
less. We can both increase efficiency and drive innovation. We
will prioritize research that supports true technological
breakthroughs and maintains America's global competitiveness.
We are also taking steps to accelerate innovation in
commercial nuclear development. America must lead the
commercialization of affordable and abundant nuclear energy.
DOE is working to advance the rapid deployment of next-
generation nuclear technology, including small modular
reactors. I am proud to report that we have officially ended
the previous administration's reckless pause on LNG (Liquefied
Natural Gas) export permits and are returning to regular order
for reviewing and approving new permits.
DOE will also work to replenish the Strategic Petroleum
Reserve, a national asset that protects our security in times
of crisis. We are advancing President Trump's pledge to lower
the cost of living and expand consumer choice for all Americans
by right-sizing DOE's approach to home efficiency standards and
regulations.
This month, DOE proposed the elimination or reduction of 47
regulations, the largest deregulatory effort in history. Once
finalized, these actions are projected to save the American
people approximately $11 billion dollars while restoring
consumer freedom and lowering costs. The responsible
stewardship and modernization of the Nation's nuclear weapons
systems is paramount for the Department of Energy and this
administration. DOE is focused on addressing critical upgrades
for the U.S. nuclear stockpile and maintaining our engine
powerhouses for submarines and aircraft carriers. Both tasks
will become even more crucial in the next few years.
Our nuclear innovation is a nation that began with the
Manhattan Project, and the next Manhattan Project is clearly AI
(Artificial Intelligence). DOE has a significant role to play
in driving AI innovation for scientific discovery and national
security. Our agency has world-class high-performance computing
capabilities, including four of the world's top ten
supercomputers. Harnessing our energy potential to power global
AI leadership while meeting growing energy demand will be the
challenge of our time, but America does not back down from big
challenges or big builds.
As Secretary of Energy, I am honored by the responsibility
to help meet the American people's growing needs for energy and
lead the world in energy development.
Thank you for the opportunity to testify before the
committee today.
[The statement follows:]
Prepared Statement of Hon. Christopher Wright
Chairman Kennedy, Ranking Member Murray, and Members of the
Committee, it is an honor to appear before you and this Committee today
as the Secretary of Energy to discuss the President's Fiscal Year (FY)
2026 Budget request for the Department of Energy (``the Department'' or
``DOE'').
America has a historic opportunity to secure our energy systems;
deliver leadership in scientific and technological innovation,
including in Artificial Intelligence; maintain and strengthen our
weapons stockpiles; and meet Cold War legacy waste commitments. The
Department of Energy is capable of meeting these critical missions
while increasing efficiency, unleashing innovation, and ensuring we are
better stewards of taxpayer dollars. President Trump is committed to
balancing the budget and implementing fiscal restraint--focusing agency
funding on the crucial goal of unleashing American energy dominance.
This is a commitment I share and a duty I intend to fulfill.
Recently, the Trump Administration celebrated its 100th day in
office, and the Department of Energy has been hard at work to deliver
on these goals of unleashing energy expansion while improving
operational efficiency. I am proud to report that we have officially
ended the previous administration's reckless pause on Liquified Natural
Gas (LNG) export permits and returned DOE to regular order for
reviewing and approving new permits. Since January, the Department has
approved applications from projects that will export more than 9.5
billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) of natural gas as LNG, adding nearly
as much incremental capacity as the world's leading LNG exporting
countries.
Additionally, we are advancing President Trump's pledge to lower
the cost of living and expand consumer choice for all Americans by
rightsizing DOE's regulatory approach to home efficiency standards. At
President Trump's direction, DOE has officially withdrawn four
conservation standards before they took effect, including standards on
electric motors, ceiling fans, dehumidifiers, and external power
supplies. DOE has delayed the implementation of efficiency standards
for walk-in coolers and freezers, efficiency standards for gas
instantaneous water heaters, and test procedures for central air
conditioning and heat pumps, as well as extended the deadline for
compliance with energy-conservation standards for manufactured housing.
In addition, DOE published a final rule withdrawing coverage of
miscellaneous gas products such as outdoor heaters and decorative
hearths, meaning those beloved products are exempt from unnecessary
regulations.
By removing burdensome rules, we are returning freedom of choice to
the American people, ensuring consumers can choose the home appliances
that work best for their lives and budgets.
While we actively work to strengthen America's role as the world's
leader in oil and natural gas production and lower costs for all
Americans, we are also taking steps to accelerate innovation in the
commercial nuclear development. In the first 100 days, DOE issued two
disbursements to support the reopening of Michigan's Palisades Nuclear
Energy Plant. We allocated high-assay low-enriched uranium (HALEU)
material to five U.S. advanced nuclear reactor developers to boost
domestic reactor deployment. It is imperative to strengthen America's
nuclear future and I am taking immediate action to accelerate the
deployment of small modular reactors (SMRs). As electricity demand
continues to grow, fueled by AI development and the growth of American
manufacturing, Americans will need more energy from more sources,
including nuclear.
priorities
My priorities for the Department of Energy are clear--to unleash a
golden era of American energy dominance while strengthening our
national security. Energy is the essential ingredient that enables
everything we do. Access to an abundant and reliable energy supply is a
key ingredient to unlocking prosperity and ensuring human flourishing
and innovation.
Consequently, we are focused on energy addition, versus subtraction
or even replacement. As government leaders, we need to be of the
mindset that more is better; replacing energy sources does not add to
the finite energy supply that American families, businesses, and
innovators are competing for.
This means fully leveraging the reliable sources of energy that
have fueled American innovation and security for decades. Coal, oil,
and gas are abundant natural resources that our country has been
blessed with, and the Trump Administration is committed to using them
to provide affordable, reliable, and secure energy for Americans. To
this end, we are returning the Office of Fossil Energy to its original
mission--advancing affordable, reliable, and secure energy sources for
the American people while continuing to support research and
development in emerging technologies that advance these sources. This
will not only enable greater focus on expanding energy access for the
American people, but also promote more efficient use of taxpayer
dollars.
The United States is the largest global producer and exporter of
natural gas, and DOE is doing everything to ensure that the United
States retains and builds on this enviable position. Our policy
approach for LNG and other energy sources is to make it less expensive
and more reliable, and achieve more American energy production and
infrastructure development, not less. Right now, eight large-scale U.S.
export terminals are now producing around 15 Bcf/d of LNG exports to
the global market. With additional capacity currently under
construction, exports are expected to average 16 Bcf/d next year.
Exports are on track to nearly double from current levels and reach
around 29 Bcf/d around 2030 once all the export capacity under
construction is completed. This amount could grow as more projects
reach a final investment decision.
A vital area of focus is expanding commercial nuclear power across
the country. America must lead the commercialization of affordable and
abundant nuclear energy, and so DOE will focus on the rapid deployment
and export of next-generation nuclear technology, including small
modular reactors. Small modular reactors will provide reliable power
for our Nation's growing energy demands, with the added benefits of
flexible deployment due to their compact size and modular design.
We also need to unleash American energy innovation, and the
National Labs are the engine that drives research and development to
further this aim. When it comes to our National Labs, we are capable of
doing more with less. We can both increase efficiency and drive
innovation. We will prioritize research that supports true
technological breakthroughs, such as nuclear fusion, high- performance
computing, quantum computing, and AI, which will maintain America's
global competitiveness.
AI is the next Manhattan Project. AI technology will define the
future of the world, and it is essential that the U.S. leads in the
development of this technology. DOE has a significant role to play in
driving AI innovation for scientific discovery, energy innovation, and
national security. Our agency has the world-class high-performance
computing capabilities that enable fast and efficient AI research and
development, including four of the world's top ten supercomputers. To
ensure American leadership, we must not overburden AI development with
restrictions and regulations--including those on energy supplies
essential for AI data centers. We need all energy sources to power the
global AI race and meet growing data centers energy demand, including
natural gas, nuclear, geothermal, and coal, while also ensuring the
security of the grid.
Fortifying America's electric grid is critical to the reliable and
secure delivery of electricity. We are now faced with evolving and
rapid changes to the system that threaten the reliability of our grid.
Aging infrastructure and increases in demand are multifaceted stressors
to the grid, putting the national and economic security of the American
people at risk. The threats to America's energy infrastructure are also
evolving at an unprecedented pace. Cyber adversaries and physical
attacks are no longer isolated challenges--they are converging to
create a complex and persistent threat landscape. I am committed to
restoring American energy dominance to ensure that we make energy more
affordable, reliable, and secure.
DOE will also work to replenish the Strategic Petroleum Reserve
(SPR). The SPR is a national asset that protects our security in times
of crisis. The last administration's politically motivated depletion of
180 million barrels has significantly degraded SPR infrastructure,
brought storage levels to historic lows, and weakened America's ability
to respond to new geopolitical oil market shocks. At the end of
calendar year 2024, the SPR held an estimated 394 million barrels of
crude out of a 714-million-barrel top-line capacity, or operational
capacity of 680 million barrels. It is noted that the time needed to
refill the SPR is six times greater than the time required to do a
drawdown; thus, it is important to make material progress immediately.
In his 2025 Inaugural Address, President Trump made a commitment to
``bring prices down, fill our strategic reserves up again right to the
top, and export American energy all over the world.'' Subsequently, I
issued a Secretarial Order to refill the SPR and review SPR
infrastructure and develop appropriate plans to safeguard this
important strategic asset.
Critical minerals and materials, used in applications across
energy, defense, industry, and consumer electronics, are essential for
economic growth and national security. Currently, however, the United
States is reliant on other countries, like China, which dominates
midstream processing and refining. It's essential that we focus on
building domestic capabilities to extract, process, manufacture, and
recover end-of-life critical materials for our industrial needs, energy
goals, and national security. DOE is already directly supporting the
goals laid out in recent executive orders on critical minerals and
materials by identifying and expediting pending projects to support
domestic mineral production, coordinating with other agencies including
the U.S. Department of Defense, exploring the effectiveness of offtake
agreements and pricing support, and developing new programs to bolster
domestic mining and production.
America doesn't back down from big builds. If we want abundant,
affordable, and secure energy, we must invest in the transmission,
generation, and innovation that get us there. We are working to
accelerate projects through permitting reform. Every delay is a dollar
lost. We need to break ground faster with streamlined permitting,
standardized designs, and public-private partnerships to build at the
speed of national need. And we need to do so with security in mind to
be more resilient to attacks and failures. A proactive approach will
minimize disruptions and ensure the reliable delivery of essential
energy resources. Every mile of protected infrastructure is a step
toward energy independence and national resilience.
To accomplish many of the goals this administration has set, the
energy sector needs relief from the burdensome permitting process that
sabotages America's natural competitive advantages for an abundant
energy supply and reliable grid. DOE is identifying and exercising the
legal authorities it has to streamline the permitting process for
energy infrastructure to bolster our grid security and reliability. It
is imperative that interagency working groups coordinate with Congress
to ensure the Federal Government does not unnecessarily stand in the
way of accomplishing President Trump's agenda for the American people.
DOE stands ready to provide insights on permitting reform questions,
drawing on our deep bench of technical experts across a range of energy
technologies and focus areas.
DOE also remains committed to the responsible and safe cleanup of
our Nation's environmental legacy sites, from the Manhattan Project to
the Cold War. DOE's Environmental Management program will continue to
perform its cleanup efforts at all 14 of the active sites.
I believe the Department of Energy is well positioned to meet the
next chapter of American energy security, but we will need to continue
to strengthen our Nation's energy leadership by developing our enviable
resources, bolstering global partnerships, and advancing new
technologies. We need to continue to foster innovations in quantum
computing and AI. We have an urgent need to upgrade our nuclear arsenal
and our broader capabilities to design and construct nuclear weapons
and power systems. DOE can and will accomplish these goals by cutting
red tape, prioritizing common-sense solutions, and cultivating American
ingenuity.
fiscal year 2026 president's budget request
DOE proposes $45.1 billion in discretionary budget authority for FY
2026. Our budget is a fiscally responsible budget that will ensure
taxpayer resources are allocated appropriately and cost-effectively.
This budget will return DOE to its core mission of advancing energy
innovation and global competitiveness through research and development.
We will invest DOE's resources in sources and technologies that support
affordable, reliable, and secure energy and provide a return on
investment for the American taxpayers, while restoring confidence in
America's fiscal management.
The responsible stewardship and modernization of the Nation's
nuclear weapons systems is paramount for the Department of Energy and
this Administration. With $30 billion for the National Nuclear Security
Administration, we will address critical upgrades for the U.S. nuclear
stockpile and maintain our engine powerhouses for submarines and
aircraft carriers. Both tasks will become even more crucial in the next
few years. The President's budget proposes the cancellation of $15.247
billion in IIJA funds and a decrease of $2.572 billion relative to the
FY 2025 enacted level for the Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
account. This will bring to a halt investment in the Green New Scam
which wastes taxpayer money and does not solve the problems before our
Nation. While we will continue to invest in advancing emerging energy
technologies, we must ensure that every single dollar spent is
accountable to the taxpayers and generates a positive return on
investment. This Administration is ending the reckless subsidizing of
unreliable, unaffordable, and less secure energy sources.
The budget decreases $408 million relative to the FY 2025 enacted
level for nuclear energy, shifting the program's focus to
commercialization, and curtailing non-essential research. As global
energy demand continues to grow, DOE must prioritize commercialization
of affordable and abundant nuclear energy. This budget will enable the
rapid deployment of next-generation nuclear technology across the
United States. Nuclear energy is incredible. It can provide not just
electricity, but also high-temperature process heat, critical to making
the materials we need for planes, trains, cars, and houses. Now is the
time for a nuclear renaissance. DOE is going to use all available
tools, from direct funding to loans, to unleash this pivotal form of
reliable energy.
Additionally, the President's budget returns the Office of Science
to its core focus--unleashing American competitiveness. While the
budget decreases non-essential funding by $1.148 billion compared to
the FY 2025 enacted level, we believe this level of investment will
maintain competitiveness and allow us to invest in high priority areas
like high performance computing, AI, quantum information science,
fusion, and critical minerals while reducing funding for climate change
and Green New Scam research. We will also re-focus ARPA-E by decreasing
its funding by $260 million relative to the FY 2025 enacted level.
ARPA-E will no longer fund so- called green technologies and instead
will focus on high risk, high reward research that advances reliable
energy technologies and other critical and emerging technologies.
The Department is also focused on streamlining our operations
within the agency, consolidating offices and activities to increase
efficiency. We will return the Office of Fossil Energy to its proper
name and restore its central function of supporting the production of
fossil energy, including coal and critical minerals for the United
States, while decreasing the budget by $270 million relative to FY 2025
enacted levels. The budget decreases Environmental Management by $389
million relative to FY 2025 enacted, roughly half of which reflects the
transfer of responsibility for the Savannah River Site in South
Carolina to the National Nuclear Security Administration, where
plutonium pit production capabilities will be developed.
The Administration proposes to eliminate spending that is at odds
with the intentions and policies outlined in President Trump's
Executive Orders, Presidential Memoranda, Proclamations, and other
guidance.
As Secretary of Energy, I am honored and humbled by the
responsibility to help meet the American people's growing energy needs
and lead the world in energy development. Thank you for the opportunity
to testify before this subcommittee.
Senator Kennedy. Thank you, Mr. Secretary. Mr. Secretary,
how many employees did the Department of Energy have when you
took over?
Secretary Wright. Just around 16,000 government employees.
Senator Kennedy. How many does it have today?
Secretary Wright. A little under 16,000 today.
Senator Kennedy. Okay. How much have you reduced it
percentagewise?
Secretary Wright. So far, only a relatively small amount.
We are looking at larger reductions, and as Senator Murray
mentioned, we have offered voluntary plans and programs for
people to be compensated by the government as they transition
to another career. We have done this slowly, carefully, with a
lot of engagement with people, and while looking at how to
restructure our Department. So, the ultimate reduction in
workforce will be larger than it has been today, but today our
payroll has barely moved.
Senator Kennedy. Most entities in the private sector of the
size of the Department of Energy know how to modernize and
downsize, do they not?
Secretary Wright. It is essential to survival as a
business. If you want to roll with changes in the marketplace
and the business, you better be ready to change your
organization.
Senator Kennedy. Okay. I just read recently where
Microsoft, one of the most successful companies in the world,
is going to reduce its workforce by 6,000 employees, I mean, do
you think that is going to be the end of Microsoft?
Secretary Wright. No. It will not be the end of Microsoft.
I will say, these are the hardest things to do, whether it is
in a company or a government agency. You know, these are
people's lives, and our Department is blessed with tremendous
men and women who have made enormous contributions.
But you are right, Senator Kennedy, we have to look at it
critically and right-size and align the organization to the
mission and challenges of today.
LOANS
Senator Kennedy. Let me ask you a couple of specific
questions, Mr. Secretary. As a result--we had a party around
here under the Biden administration, and when you have a party,
you have to pay the band when the party is over. As a result of
the party, if you count the Inflation Reduction Act, which was
the Green New Deal, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act,
also part of the Green New Deal, the CHIPS (Creating Helpful
Incentives to Produce Semiconductors) and Science Act, your
Department got $99 billion in new appropriations, $30.5 billion
in new authorizations, and loan authority of over $400 billion.
How much of that $400 billion authority to loan money did the
Department of Energy use?
Secretary Wright. Nearly $100 billion. Thank you for making
the point that more money, as is shown in your graph and the
numbers you quoted, and more people, that the headcount in the
Department grew over 20 percent during those 4 years, our
electricity output of the Nation as a whole, grew about 2
percent, and the cost per unit of electricity grew 28 percent.
Senator Kennedy. Well, here is what----
Secretary Wright. And we didn't deliver results for all of
that.
Senator Kennedy. Here is what the Inspector General said
about some of the loans. The Inspector General, these are the
Inspector General's assessments, not mine, the Inspector
General called many of these loans, quote, ``high risk'', high
risk. And he said that these loans were designed to promote
innovation by financing projects, fine, not otherwise
acceptable by private equity investors.
What does that mean? That means that the private sector
would not get near these projects with a 10-foot pole, would
they? Only government would put up the money, wouldn't it?
Secretary Wright. That is correct.
Senator Kennedy. For example, he found that DOE, under your
predecessor, announced that it was going to make a $400 million
loan, actually, it was not a loan, it was a grant, to two
companies. They announced it. And then somebody pointed out to
them that they were Chinese companies. They had to pull the
grant back. And why are we loaning money, this is another issue
brought out by the Inspector General, why are we loaning $7.5
billion to Stellantis?
They can't get a bank loan themselves. I mean, J.P. Morgan
and Bank of America have been shoving money out the door for
energy projects. Why did we loan $9.63 billion to Blue Oval?
Why are we doing all of this? I am going to quickly give you an
example.
I had a gentleman, I am not going to use any names, come
into my office yesterday. He is from a very wealthy family in
another country. He wants to build a solar manufacturing plant
in America. He is putting up a billion dollars. Do you know how
much the American taxpayer is going to put up; $850 million.
So, he is going to get, thanks to the American taxpayer, a
billion-dollar plant for $150 million to produce solar panels,
which the world is awash in. This is unconscionable. And I hope
you will do something about it, Mr. Secretary.
Now, at some point we are going to get really specific
about savings, and I am going to expect you to get real
specific with us. I don't want to not fund anything that is
vital, but I am tired of the spending porn. I am tired of it.
Secretary Wright. I think you have good reason to be
concerned with how monies have been deployed outside of the
Loan Program Office and for other assistance as well, and we
will come back to that. But your concern is well placed.
Senator Kennedy. Vice Chair Murray.
Senator Murray. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
FEDERAL EMPLOYEES
Secretary Wright, despite your claims to the contrary, more
than 3,500 employees have taken the deferred resignation offer.
That is about 20 percent of your staff, and we do know that you
fired several hundred probationary employees as well. That has
meant some offices are now gutted, there is nobody there.
Others are in turmoil.
I give you an example: the Office of Clean Energy
Demonstrations, which manages $20 billion in grants from the
Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, lost more than 77 percent of its
staff. It is going to be nearly impossible for that office to
accomplish its basic functions, let alone oversee any massive
and complex energy construction projects. And as I mentioned,
your firings have been really arbitrary, even firing some of
our grid operators and linemen at the Bonneville Power
Administration, which are not paid for by taxpayer dollars.
I know you scrambled to get those people back, and several
weeks ago you said no more firings will occur at Bonneville.
These positions, really, they are absolutely critical to the
reliability of the grid in Washington State and the Pacific
Northwest. Will you commit today to exempting BPA (Bonneville
Power Administration) from your hiring freeze so they can bring
back on staff, mission-critical staff, and keep the Northwest
Grid running?
Secretary Wright. We are very concerned about the power
marketing agencies. They are critical to our country,
Bonneville being one of them. We have been careful that their
operations have not been disrupted. They were short-staffed
when I arrived in this chair, and we will continue to treat
them as the critical assets they are.
Again, headcount is one input. It is an important input,
but it is not the only input in running a successful business
or successful agency. And again, you brought up people that
have provisionally elected to do a deferred resignation
program. Many of them still have the option to decide whether
they really are staying or they really are leaving. They are in
transition. We are engaged with them. They are not fired. They
are not gone from the Department of Energy yet----
Senator Murray. Well, there are a lot of folks still on the
payroll at the expense of the taxpayer. We are told that over
$70 million worth, they are on administrative leave now. They
are at home. They are not working. They are not processing
anything. They are not doing any work, and as a result, offices
across the Department are not able to function, because those
people are not there even though taxpayers are still telling
them to. On BPA, just in terms of that, I do look forward to
DOE hiring back sufficient staff. We have got to cover these
critical responsibilities.
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY BUDGET
Let me go turn to the budget. President Trump's skinny
budget really doubles down on the cuts that DOGE (Department of
Government Efficiency) has made to the Department. You propose
cutting $2.5 billion from the Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy, 74 percent of the overall budget. That
eliminates programs that reduce energy prices for businesses,
for families.
Now, on the one hand, you and the President say that you
support U.S. dominance in energy emerging technologies, but
then on the other hand, you are proposing cutting over a
billion dollars in funding to the Office of Science. That
really undermines critical research programs for AI, for
fusion, for quantum computing, for nuclear energy, and critical
minerals.
Now, typically, a new administration crafts a budget
request that actually reflects their priorities. You talk a
lot, I know, about lowering costs for consumers and creating
this next Manhattan Project for AI, but it seems that this
budget request includes across-the-board cuts to the very
programs that would help you achieve those stated goals.
So, I want to get this straight. You are asking Congress to
cut the budget for the Office of Science by more than a billion
dollars. That will help advance AI research and quantum
computing?
Secretary Wright. It won't inhibit them at all. In fact, I
do think on the margin it will help, because, of course, all
the things you listed: fusion, quantum computing, basic
fundamental, advanced science, none of those things will be
cut. The problem is the labs have drifted into things that are
not fundamental basic science. They are political science, and
that is just not the mission of the labs.
Senator Murray. Do you have examples of those that you
would like to share with us?
Secretary Wright. We have a crazy range of things on
climate change. There is science around climate change that I
write about and have studied for 2 decades. There is real
science there, but it has become a political game more than a
real science game. That is not the business of the national
labs. And of course, we are going to shrink that activity.
We are going to be smarter and more efficient. But none of
the top priorities you mentioned are going to be touched at
all.
Senator Murray. Well, you talk about the importance----
Secretary Wright. In fact, they are going to be enhanced.
NUCLEAR POWER
Senator Murray. You talk about the importance of nuclear
power and small modular reactors. Just yesterday, you said you
were in favor of every incentive we can get from the Federal
Government to restart this industry. Yet in your budget that
you are proposing, you cut the Office of Nuclear Energy by $408
million. How are investors and companies supposed to have
confidence in partnering with you when what you say and what
your budget says are two different things?
Secretary Wright. Each individual line item does not
indicate a policy. I think the nuclear industry is quite
enthusiastic and quite confident they are going to have the
best environment ever for commercial nuclear power under this
administration, under my leadership of the DOE. What we are
doing is mobilizing tens of billions of dollars of private
capital using government----
Senator Murray. Yes. Well, the private capital is counting
on us to make that investment. Otherwise, we see them pull out.
We have actually seen companies in the country now pulling out
of projects because of the chaos in your Department. As a
businessman, you said that you should know more than anyone the
importance of certainty. And when they see the chaos and they
see them pulling back, then they are not going to invest their
private money either.
Secretary Wright. If you can connect me with anyone in the
nuclear space, or fusion, or any of the things you listed that
is pulling back, I would love to jump on the phone with them,
because I have not met one. Not one. And in fact, I felt
exactly the opposite. The most efficient tool that the
Department of Energy has to help the nuclear industry is the
Loan Program Office. Get high-quality equity money in front and
bring government debt on these first few-of-a-kind reactors
behind them. That is the way to get it done. It is not direct
grant dollars. It is the Loan Program Office dollars.
Senator Murray. The Chairman is going to pull my mic in a
second, and I do want to ask you a really critical question
quickly. We are having a budget hearing today. We have not seen
your full budget request. We need that in front of us. It is
required. It is critical information. When are we going to see
your full budget request?
Secretary Wright. I am working with OMB (Office of
Management and Budget) right now to get that out as soon as we
can. I understand your urgency.
Senator Murray. Thank you.
Senator Kennedy. Senator Britt.
Senator Britt. Thank you so much, Mr. Chair.
Senator Kennedy. Senator Britt, we were talking earlier,
and I made the comment, and I want to state it on the record,
that you have got an automatic place in heaven for having to
carry Senator Tuberville. Okay.
[Laughter.]
Senator Britt. This is legendary right here, legendary.
Senator Kennedy. I hope you are listening, Senator
Tuberville.
NUCLEAR REACTORS
Senator Britt. Legendary. Well, as the Chair mentioned
earlier, and I was not expecting that one, so that is some good
stuff. Your Department covers everything from basic research,
to advanced nuclear reactors, to grid security, I mean, the
work that you do affects Americans every single day. When we
are looking at that, and this kind of piggybacks off of both of
the questions that have been asked previously, but I want to
talk about China and where they are specifically with their
embrace of nuclear generation.
When you look at the facts as they are, China has at least
28 nuclear reactors that are in construction, which is about
half of the construction of all nuclear reactors across the
entire globe. We look at what they are doing. We know they are
working to undermine us. To me, this is very similar to what we
saw in the manufacturing space. They are using political and
economic leverage to ultimately manipulate and get ahead.
I think that that is a mistake on a number of ways. I mean,
if we turn a blind eye to that. I think it is critical that we
look at this, particularly within the AI space, knowing that AI
is not just an AI race, it is also an energy race, and we must
win both.
So, my question to you is: What are your plans; what is the
Trump administration's plans to win that race, and how do we
make sure that you have the funds in the proper place to do
that?
Secretary Wright. Fantastic, Senator Britt. And I agree
very much with the assumptions. China is moving full speed
ahead with nuclear. In fact, the most reactors they are
building is essentially a knockoff, a stealing of an American
reactor technology. But they build them much cheaper and much
faster, and they don't have the giant bureaucratic regulatory
overhang we have in the United States.
We need to get the NRC (Nuclear Regulatory Commission) in
touch with physical reality. Grand Central Station in New York,
our train station, could not be licensed as a nuclear reactor
because its radiation is too high. We have standards that are
just so expensive to meet, it makes everything slow, it makes
everything expensive. We bring all sorts of regulatory
uncertainty into that environment. So, we are talking with
commercial providers. We have offered up DOE lands. We have had
tons of solicitations: Come build on our land. We will be fast,
we will be efficient, we will help you get going. We will
arrange creative incentives for you to build nuclear reactors
in our space.
I think we will do it. The Loan Program Office is a key
tool. We do need to make sure we have funding available in the
Loan Program Office, because used judiciously it is a way to
leverage private capital to make things happen fast. If your
equity investors behind that debt are the six hyperscalers in
the United States, they are great credit. The American
taxpayers are going to be paid back.
Alternatively, in the last administration, the Loan Program
Office in its 15-year history, lent $43 billion. In the 76 days
since Election Day to Inauguration Day of the new President,
the previous administration lent or committed $93 billion, two
and a half times the 15--year total----
Senator Britt. You are kidding me. Tell me that timeframe
again?
Secretary Wright. 76 days from Election Day, when Biden----
Senator Britt. I didn't hear that.
Secretary Wright [continuing]. Lost the Presidential
election, to President Trump's inauguration, in 76 days----
Senator Britt. That is absolute insanity.
Secretary Wright [continuing]. They lent or committed $93
billion. So, is there a reason I am moving slow when I am doing
evaluations of projects? Yes, there is a very big reason.
Senator Britt. Well, let me turn quickly in my remaining
time, and thank you so much for doing that. We cannot cede this
ground to China, and so thank you for making sure----
Secretary Wright. Yes.
Senator Britt [continuing]. That we don't do that at all.
In December of 2020, DOE selected a team led by Southern
Company in Birmingham, Alabama, to lead the Molten Chloride
Reactor Experiment, MCRE, in partnership with DOE. Developing
this new type of nuclear reactor is transformational to that
next-generation nuclear energy, and that type of leadership
that we need to see across our Nation. The MCRE program is
going to deliver the world's first fast-spectrum salt reactor
to support the administration's goal of unleashing American
energy dominance and to achieve world leadership in nuclear
energy.
Further, MCRE is the first demonstration of a reactor
technology that can revolutionize the commercial shipping
industry, and serving as a catalyst for restoring American
maritime dominance through floating nuclear power plants and
U.S.-flagged large commercial ships. So, this project supports
scalable, deployable, and transformational American nuclear
energy.
Given that strategic value associated with this critical
advanced reactor demonstration project, will you commit to
support this project and to continuing to work so that it has
successful reactor operation and will be executed during this
administration?
Secretary Wright. A super exciting project. I can't commit
today to any specific project because I very carefully
assembled a team of people, of leaders, that are evaluating
honestly and objectively all of these projects and going full
steam ahead on ones that deliver affordable, reliable energy,
and have a reasonable chance of success, and I will----
Senator Britt. Well, good. I hope you will take a look at
this. We are really proud of the work that is being done, and I
think that you are going to be very pleased with what you see.
GRID SECURITY
And in my last few remaining seconds, I just wanted to ask
about grid security. So, when you are looking at--the Chair and
I; we live in Gulf Coast States, and so hurricane season is
upon us. When we are looking at what is happening, you know,
with the grid, obviously making sure it is protected, not only
for natural disasters but national security disasters. What are
you all doing to ensure that reliability and protection?
Secretary Wright. It is a key issue. It is a vulnerability
of our country. Our grid is very distributed, a lot of it is
very antiquated. It is very easy to attack our grid, and we are
being attacked all the time. And I think there are more
sophisticated attacks possible that have not been launched
against us yet, but it could be an adversary waiting for the
right time. In fact, one of the meetings I had right before
coming here was with----
Senator Kennedy. Land the plane for me, Mr. Secretary. We
have got to move on here.
Secretary Wright. Yes. I agree with the problem. We are
working on it, including today.
Senator Britt. Excellent. Thank you.
Senator Kennedy. Senator Baldwin.
Senator Baldwin. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And on that last
topic, I am very interested in a discussion on transformers at
some point, large-scale.
Secretary Wright. Yes.
Senator Baldwin. But grid security. Anyways, I wanted to
share that in Wisconsin, we have seen the real impact of the
Inflation Reduction Act. Over $5.3 billion in private
investment has been announced, with nearly $3 billion already
spent since the bill was enacted. We added over 4,500 jobs from
projects that are either already up and running or will be
soon, and that is tangible economic growth in our communities.
And I wanted to make sure that that was part of the record,
as these investments are on the chopping block in many
respects. And they are on the chopping block to make room for
tax cuts that we know disproportionately benefit corporations
and the well-off. So, I wanted to just put that into the
record.
GRID INVESTMENTS
But Secretary Wright, utilities across the country,
including those in Wisconsin, have been making long-term plans
for major grid investments based on the financing promised in
the Inflation Reduction Act. They have spent years planning for
and investing in transmission, energy production, and storage
projects that will promote our energy independence and a
resilient grid, all while lowering costs for Americans.
And these promised funds have been frozen by the Trump
administration. So what update do you have today for Wisconsin
utilities and businesses that are waiting for these funds to be
released so that they can start or continue building out their
planned investments?
Secretary Wright. Yes, thank you. Thank you for the
question, Senator Baldwin. We have not actually frozen funds.
Projects that are ongoing today, we are paying our bills. We
are reaching out to all of--yes, please provide us, if you know
of a partner that has done work and has unpaid bills, we will
get it paid. I am aware of none of those.
CRITICAL MINERALS
Senator Baldwin. We will follow up. On a related note,
right now the United States is over 95 percent dependent upon
China for battery-grade graphite. A Wisconsin-based company is
working to commercialize a domestic, a domestic bio-based
alternative to battery-grade graphite but is waiting for the
Department of Energy to release funds that were announced but
that have now been paused.
This administration continues to say that developing a
domestic critical mineral supply chain is a top priority, but
we are months into a funding freeze with no answers on the
status of awards for programs like the Department of Energy's
Critical Minerals Accelerator. With timely action from DOE, the
company COnovate is committed to rapidly scaling this home-
grown solution to address one of our most critical supply chain
vulnerabilities. What is the timeline for getting the Critical
Minerals Accelerator funding out the door?
Secretary Wright. Through this summer, we will review all
of the major projects, and every one, as it is done, we will
reach out to that company. We are going to get information from
them, feedback, you said they have been working for years on
it. We will hear their plans, we will review their plans.
Certainly, we want a domestic supply of graphite or other anode
materials, 100 percent that is in the wheelhouse. If it is a
viable technology and a credible company with financing to do
it, those are the kinds of things we are absolutely looking to
fund.
But every one of them is sort of a project-by-project
basis. It will be a back and forth with that company in
Wisconsin, and if that idea looks to----
Senator Baldwin. With a footprint in South Carolina and
Michigan also, I might add, so.
Secretary Wright. Now look, myself and the administration
are all in on resourcing manufacturing in the United States,
and particularly in these critical areas where China dominates,
so.
Senator Baldwin. And as this is looking forward to the 2026
budget, will the Critical Materials Accelerator Program
continue to be funded in the Department of Energy's budget, or
are you planning to shut down our investments in the domestic
battery material supply chain?
Secretary Wright. Well, I can't speak to any specific
programs, but will we continue to invest in reshoring critical
mineral supplies in the United States? 100 percent, that effort
will go on.
ISOTOPES
Senator Baldwin. Okay. Lastly, industry leaders in
Wisconsin have made major gains in deploying commercial
technologies that provide for domestic management of used
nuclear fuel that is economical, safe, and sustainable. They
are also using the same process to create medical-grade
isotopes, like Moly-99, that will help solve chronic shortages
of these critical nuclear medicines.
These industry leaders have had support from Congress and a
successful partnership with the nuclear energy scientists at
the Department of Energy to address this national security
concern. Knowing this, will you consider reversing the proposed
cuts to DOE's nuclear programs and invest in the development of
a safer and more sustainable nuclear fuel cycle in your 2026
budget?
Secretary Wright. So, we have cuts at different levels in
different Departments. We are not pulling back on our nuclear
efforts at all. They may be funded slightly differently, but we
are not pulling back on that. And what you specifically
mentioned, the radioisotopes, it is one of the most exciting
new things in cancer treatment, and imaging, and all that, and
that is----
Senator Baldwin. And right now, we resource them from
reactors in Russia, and in other countries, and we have that
technology now developed here in the United States, in part
from a long-term partnership with the Department of Energy and
spin-offs from research institutions across the country, I want
to see that commitment kept up.
Secretary Wright. I am sure we will talk in a few weeks
about it. I have got to dig into that particular project, but
definitely it is in a great spot.
Senator Kennedy. Senator Hoeven.
Senator Hoeven. Thanks, Mr. Chair.
Senator Kennedy. Talented Senator Hoeven.
Senator Hoeven. Thank you, Mr. Chair, and Mr. Secretary,
great to see you again, and great to have you. Are you enjoying
the job? I know your background is all in the private sector.
How is it going, and are you enjoying it?
Secretary Wright. It is thrilling. It is exciting. I have
worked with a number of tremendous people, from our labs to
inside our Department, to the people sitting behind me. Yes.
Senator Hoeven. Well, with your knowledge and expertise----
Secretary Wright. It is the ride of a lifetime.
BASELOAD FOR GRID STABILITY
Senator Hoeven. Well, with your knowledge and expertise, it
is just great having you in the position. We appreciate you
doing it. I am going to tell you something, you know, and then
ask for your help. We need more baseload, you know, for AI and
all these different purposes, we need more electricity, period.
But for the stability of the grid and the reliability of the
grid, we need more baseload. So, it is very important that we
keep our coal-fired electricity online.
We have the most advanced coal-fired electric industry in
the world in North Dakota, which you know, you have seen it.
And we have addressed things like SOx, and NOx, and mercury,
and now we are working on CO2 capture and sequestration. Now,
it is technologically viable, we know that, but it is not
commercially viable. You have had some experience with this
because--and so have I, because when you and I both started
working on the shale play for oil and gas, it was
technologically viable; it was not commercially viable. But we
cracked the code, and it has been a boon for this country in
energy.
And the thing about the CO2 capture is our plants are fine
for X-number of years, but we know that to keep them long-term,
we are going to have to address CO2 the way we addressed SOx,
NOx, and mercury, and the other things. And it is a potential
twofer in that we can take that CO2 and put it downhole, and we
can double what we get out of the shale plays in terms of oil
and gas. This is all stuff you know.
Now, at the University of North Dakota, we have the Energy
and Environmental Research Center that is a leader in
developing and enhancing these technologies and actually
commercializing them, and we need to continue that. So, I guess
I want to know that you are going to be willing to continue
that partnership agreement with the Fossil Energy Office so we
continue this development.
And it includes not just the partnership agreement with the
EERC (Energy & Environmental Research Center) and the DOE, but
it also includes PCOR (Plains CO2 Reduction), so you can find
these geological sites where you can sequester, and then also
CarbonSAFE, which is how we monitor it so we know it is
captured, and it stays captured, and how much has been
captured.
So, one, I would like your help, or to know that you are
going to continue to work with us on those programs. I want you
to come out and see what we are doing, so that you know, you
know, seeing is believing, although I know you are pretty well
aware of it. And then I want your ideas on what else we can do
to, again, crack the code here. So, go from there, will you?
Secretary Wright. Thank you, Senator Hoeven. And yes, I ran
into John Argue in Oklahoma just a few weeks ago.
Senator Hoeven. Very good.
Secretary Wright. And I appreciate the great research that
has been done there. And I certainly expect and hope that will
continue in partnership with us. I am going to be cautious
about committing to anything specific because, again, we have a
process and we are going through it. We have got a whole team.
But should we continue to look into these technologies?
Absolutely, you know, as you said, with shale, we drove the
cost curve down. Can you do that with other technologies? Yes.
So technological research is of great interest, the value of
CO2 to enhance oil recovery is, I think, going to be a very
large and growing issue in the next 20 years. So yes, these are
areas of great interest.
You know, as with every technology and every business, the
devil comes in the details, in the numbers, and you know, what
is the most effective ways to approach these things. You
mentioned coal. Coal has been the largest source of global
electricity for a hundred years. It is almost certainly going
to be for decades to come. So, it is just a backbone of the
global energy system. And if you look at States across the
country that have the lowest-cost and most reliable electricity
grids, they tend to be skewed to have very coal-heavy grids.
Senator Hoeven. Right. And we supply to a 12-State region,
and if we develop this technology successfully, others will
adopt it. And then, like I say with the CO2, we have got the
secondary oil recovery. Now, Senator Kennedy is going to try to
tell you that all the smart guys are in Louisiana, and that is
just not true. They have got plenty of smart guys, including
him, but we have got the experts at the EERC. And you know
that.
And the other thing is, we are looking for your good ideas
too. I mean, your background, you figured this stuff out. And
with your degrees and your training, you know, we need your
help on how to do that. And at the end of the day, this is
about commercial viability. So, I share Senator Kennedy's
concerns about spending levels in government. We need to get
the debt and deficit under control. But we grow our economy and
create more revenue when we solve these challenges.
And that is really your role at DOE, is to help our private
sector, empower our private sector, to do these amazing,
innovative things. So, we need your ideas on how to crack this
code.
Secretary Wright. Thank you, Senator. And I look forward to
visiting EERC with you and sitting around and having these
dialogues with the great scientists there.
Senator Hoeven. Thanks again.
Secretary Wright. Thank you for the great comments.
Senator Kennedy. Senator Coons.
Senator Coons. Thank you, Chairman Kennedy, and Ranking
Member Murray.
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY FISCAL YEAR 2026 BUDGET
Secretary Wright, good to be with you. I just want to
briefly frame, as I understand it, the Department of Energy
plays three critical overall functions: Maintaining our
national security through the Nuclear Security Administration;
investing in critical public-private partnerships that will
demonstrate and deploy the next generation of energy
technologies, nuclear, geothermal, oil and gas, hydrogen; and
funding research, both fundamental and applied, at our national
labs and through many great university partnerships that
ensures we remain the global leader in R&D.
These functions are critical to your three major goals that
I share, outcompeting China, reducing energy costs for
Americans, and eliminating energy poverty across the world. And
based on your background as an MIT-trained engineer and
successful energy entrepreneur, I think you and I share these
goals. But my core concern is that the way DOGE has impacted
your workforce, and the folks you have got available to carry
these goals out, undermine these critical goals.
My understanding; and now I am on a number of different
Appropriations Subcommittees, and so far, in every single one
of them, we don't have a budget. Do you have a budget before us
today, or is it a skinny budget?
Secretary Wright. So far, just the skinny budget. We are
working with OMB to release more of that, but that is still a
work in progress.
Senator Coons. And it is awful skinny. I mean, it is about
a page. So, I am working off of an outline. But I am alarmed by
a proposed cut of more than a billion to the Office of Science.
That is more than 8 percent compared to enacted, at a time when
China is investing in R&D, and combined with what is going on
at NSF (National Science Foundation), an independent agency, I
am concerned we are kneecapping the American Science
Enterprise, which played such a critical role in our success in
the 20th century.
RESEARCH FUNDING FOR UNIVERSITIES
The skinny budget claims that your cut will only affect
climate change and New Green Scam--Green New Scam research, but
it does not define those terms, and I am concerned we will end
up defunding critical research. The University of Delaware, my
home State's leading research university, and many others in my
State and around the country, are alarmed by Executive Order
14222, which lowers the F&A (Facilities and Administrative)
caps on Federal grants.
How will your Department implement this EO (Executive
Order) in a way that does not disproportionately impact R1
universities that are smaller and less well-resourced than the
handful of critical institutions that really have long demanded
the lion's share of Federal research dollars?
Secretary Wright. You are talking about the overhead
percentage on things?
Senator Coons. Yes.
Secretary Wright. When we sent it out, we invited all of
the universities to reach back out to us, to engage in a
dialogue like I think you are proposing. So far, no one has
taken us up on that effort.
Senator Coons. Not one university has reached back out to
say----
Secretary Wright. Not, not that I----
Senator Coons [continuing]. Here, is how we would do it in
a way that would minimize the impact?
Secretary Wright. Many sued us, but I----
Senator Coons. Many sued you?
Secretary Wright. But I am not sure----
Senator Coons. That is one form of outreach.
Secretary Wright. I am not aware of any dialogues on that.
You know, it is a sticky question, Senator Coons. And look, it
is a great university, and I am fully sympathetic to where you
are coming from. And it is part of the--of course, it is part
of this broader effort that we want to get, and going back to
your national lab science question, that will be done bottom-up
at every lab. I share that national labs are a treasure. We
don't want to slow down any of our critical research, but is
there some fat in there? Is there stuff we are working on that
is not really basic science or critical to our energy thing? I
think there is. And I have not found a lab director yet that
disagrees with me.
Senator Coons. I have visited four of the national labs,
been very impressed with them, look forward to continuing to
fund--support funding for them, and engage with them. But I
have two more questions, and I will keep moving with my
remaining time.
Secretary Wright. You bet.
HYDROGEN HUBS
Senator Coons. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law created
hydrogen hubs and tasked DOE with implementing them, and I
worked with bipartisan delegations from Pennsylvania, New
Jersey, Delaware, with unions, with universities, with our oil
refineries, three of them, and we ultimately secured an award
from DOE for the Mid-Atlantic Clean Hydrogen Hub. I want to
thank you for sending the pre-award funding that was just
received last week.
Overall, this grant and leveraged private partnership would
get $750 million in Federal, $2 billion in leveraged private
investment over a decade to create thousands of good-paying
jobs. My concern is that the hubs program is a key part of re-
industrialization, and I legislatively helped create the Office
of Clean Energy Demonstration, or OCED, in statute, and I am
concerned the workforce has been hollowed out and that they
will not be able to actually implement this and other programs.
There are others I could cite, the Loan Program Office, the
Office of Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains, and others,
with something like 4,000 DOE employees encouraged to retire or
terminated, you have lost about 20 percent of your workforce.
How can nuclear--we will take nuclear--as an emerging critical
American competitive technology be supported by the Loan
Program Office when the House Reconciliation Bill would gut it
and your budget zeroes it out? How does LPO (Loan Programs
Office) function at the cutting edge of energy?
Secretary Wright. I think LPO is critical at the cutting
edge of energy. It is really the most efficient tool we have in
the Department to help emerging energy technologies. So, I
absolutely want to see funding. I want to see the Loan Program
Office able to lean in on emerging technologies. It is our
greatest bang for the buck to help technologies. And I know
that comes to the Senate next. I am making a plea. I would very
much----
Senator Coons. Don't enact the budget we send; enact a
budget you know we need. And we may end up--forgive me, just
speaking for myself in the last ten seconds, Mr. Chairman--we
may end up saying, you must have this many people here, and
this many people here, and this many people here, because when
certain functions get down to a handful of people, I would love
us to see that the LPO is actually able to meet the mission.
Secretary Wright. We would be able to meet the mission.
Senator Kennedy. Senator Murkowski.
Senator Murkowski. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I appreciated
that exchange and a little bit of that candor. I appreciate
that.
Mr. Secretary, thank you for being here. Thank you for your
leadership. I know that folks in Alaska are looking forward to
you heading north in a couple of weeks along with Secretary
Burgum, and Administrator Zeldin, as well as a good handful of
folks from our national labs. So, it is a big deal. We
appreciate it.
I had a chance this morning to have Secretary Burgum before
our Interior Appropriations Subcommittee, and while he didn't
outline some of the initiatives that may be unfolding when you
are up there, I hope that you take the time to really get close
to those that are making things happen on the ground. I know
they are going to have some questions to you about the status
of some of the programs through the Department of Energy.
ALASKA PROJECTS
And I hear what you are saying about you are not freezing
anything, but there is review that is going on. I know one of
the proposals that people are anxious about is the CarbonSAFE
Phase III up North. This is what they are working on on the
North Slope with regards to a carbon project that helps to
facilitate and really enhance the build out of our oil
operations up in the North Slope. So, you will be hearing those
questions from folks, and I know you are going to be teed up on
it.
Along some of the same lines that Senator Coons was
mentioning, just in terms of the ability to do the work that we
expect within the different offices. You noted in your opening
comments just the great innovation that we have seen in oil,
and gas, and in coal and how we are moving that forward. We
have also seen that within the renewable energy space, and the
EERE is looking at a cut here. You are going to have reductions
in forces in that Department.
I reminded Secretary Burgum in a prior conversation that as
rich as we are in our oil, in our gas, and in our coal, so many
of our communities are so isolated, they will never, ever, ever
be part of anybody's grid. And so, the successes that we have
seen with microgrids, and how you take a little bit of wind,
and a little bit of solar, and a little bit of--call it a run-
of-river, or maybe you have some good storage, we are
pioneering, we are ``imagineering'' in ways that people can't
begin to appreciate. And some of the folks within your national
labs have come up and seen it and remarked on it.
So just know that we are looking at the cuts to EERE. I am
a little worried that perhaps things like microgrids get left
behind. This will be the energy security for so many areas that
have to figure it out on their own. They will not have the
opportunity to plug in to Alaska's natural gas, and so I am
just, I am putting that out there to you.
Secretary Wright. Yes.
Senator Murkowski. I also wanted to raise the issue of the
Office of Indian Energy. As you know, I am the chairman of the
Indian Affairs Committee, and we were successful in getting
DOE's Office of Indian Energy Policy and Programs up off the
ground and get the Tribal Energy Loan Guarantee Program going.
I have been disappointed with how it has struggled.
Your skinny budget does not make any mention of the Office
of Indian Energy or any of the projects that we are working on
specifically to tribal energy development. Can you give me any
review or oversight as to where you may be taking that?
Secretary Wright. Yes. Thank you, Senator. And as we know,
we both share that passion for energy to remote communities,
energy to disadvantaged peoples. I think that is a critical
area of focus for business and for government. So I can't
provide any more, you know, department-wide thing in front of
the budget that will be released, but I think the things you
mention are unique and they are specific, and those are things
that make sense for us to work on. We have national labs that
are working on these problems, new solar materials as well,
getting remote energy, getting energy to communities that don't
have good access to it. I think that remains in the wheelhouse.
There is a big percentage cut to EERE, but it has got a
ginormous budget. For everything it works on combined, it is a
little over 3 percent of American energy, you know, and it has
received hundreds of billions of dollars of subsidies and had
tax credits for 30 years. So, you know, wins--you know, big
government dollars thrown at something whose main impact has
been to make electricity more expensive and not add
meaningfully to the global or national energy system. I don't
think it is unreasonable to shrink that. You talk about
specific applications, remote energy, that is different.
Senator Murkowski. Well, and as you and I have discussed at
some length, it is this issue of affordability, and your very
keen focus it has to be--the energy has to be accessible, yes,
but we have got to focus on the affordability place. Many
people fail to appreciate, because we have got such
extraordinary resources, that we pay some of the highest energy
costs in the United States in our State. And so, everything
that we can do to find those unique, discrete energy solutions,
and this is why we count on some of the really bright people
around here to make it happen.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Secretary Wright. Thank you.
Senator Kennedy. Senator Ossoff.
Senator Ossoff. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Mr. Secretary, good to see you. Welcome.
Secretary Wright. Thank you.
GRID UPGRADES
Senator Ossoff. A strong, resilient grid is an important
contributor to America's energy security, yes?
Secretary Wright. Yes.
Senator Ossoff. In the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, with
strong bipartisan majorities, we established new efforts to
support state, governments, and utilities at upgrading their
grids to make them more resilient, more reliable, and more
efficient. And in 2023, the State of Georgia was awarded $250
million to implement, in partnership with three utilities,
Oglethorpe Power, Georgia Transmission, and Georgia System
Operations grid upgrades across the State. Each dollar, by the
way, matched by these utilities, private skin in the game as
well.
And this is especially important in rural Georgia. Just to
paint the picture for you, after the storm last fall, Hurricane
Helene, the outages lasted for weeks, and weeks, and weeks.
There was not the manpower or the capacity to repair all the
damage. There is a real need for grid upgrades in Georgia, and
these funds have been obligated, but I understand are now in a
state of limbo pending review, additional questions being
asked, driving some significant uncertainty in Georgia because,
(a) my constituents want a world-class upgraded energy grid,
and (b) these private companies have already themselves
committed tens of millions of dollars of capital to this
project.
So where does that stand, and when will we have an answer
on whether those funds, which again have already been obligated
and are part of a bipartisan piece of legislation, are indeed
going to be headed to Georgia?
Secretary Wright. Yes, Senator Ossoff, thank you for your
question and your comments. I agree, grid stability, and do we
have challenges there, absolutely; is there work to be done
there, absolutely. I don't think you were here when I first
laid out the reason--one of the reasons we are doing these very
careful reviews was it is a similar story for the grants as the
Loan Program Office. But I will give the numbers from the Loan
Program Office, it extended $43 billion of credit in the 15
years it existed as an office, and then in the 76 days after
the election last November----
Senator Ossoff. This is not an LPO. This is not an LPO
award?
Secretary Wright. It is the same thing on the other side. I
will just say it this way then, of those grants that you are
talking about, those commitments that have been made more money
was committed in the 76 days from the election----
Senator Ossoff. Forgive me, Mr. Secretary, but my time is
limited. And the question is: when will my constituents have an
answer?
Secretary Wright. This summer. This summer, we put together
a team, a process. We are engaging with the lenders, and we are
running through them. And everyone that is viable, that is
going to help the community of Georgia that is financially
viable, those are the things that will go forward.
Senator Ossoff. What I mean, this is, again, bipartisan
legislation, grid upgrades, bipartisan support in Georgia,
award to the State of Georgia, private investment to accompany
it, clear unmet need, let us have a follow-up conversation
about how we can expedite consideration of that, because there
is just tremendous uncertainty that has been created by this
insistence on a grant-by-grant-by-grant, loan-by-loan-by-loan
scrubbing of everything against ideological criteria at OMB.
And I understand that you want to make sure that public
dollars are well used, but these are obligated funds that were
appropriated on a bipartisan basis in Congress.
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY PROJECT REVIEW
I want to raise one more key Georgia concern with you. Are
you familiar with the Blue Bird Corporation, the most famous
school bus in the world?
Secretary Wright. Okay.
Senator Ossoff. Blue Bird, made in Georgia. We are proud of
it.
Secretary Wright. I recognize the name, but no not--okay,
made in Georgia.
Senator Ossoff. And there is growing demand from local
school districts for electric school buses for all kinds of
good reasons. And the Blue Bird Corporation wants to get in on
this and be able to meet that market demand. They have invested
$80 million of private capital to retool an aging manufacturing
facility to produce those electric school buses. That was
matched by an $80 million Federal grant from the Department of
Energy.
And similarly, and again, I frankly don't need, don't have
time, with all due respect, for the big picture on what you are
doing and why you are doing it, I sort of understand the
talking points on that. What I want to convey to you is how
important this is to Middle Georgia. This is one of the most
storied and successful companies in Georgia history. When this
grant was awarded, Peach County Industrial Development
Authority called it an awesome win for our community. Fort
Valley Mayor Jeffery Lundy said it is Celebration day. I got a
quote from a councilman here who said that: When Blue Bird goes
up, Fort Valley goes up; when Blue Bird goes down, Fort Valley
goes down.
And again, we have got private capital that has been
hazarded, that has been invested, and expectation, a lot of
commercial decisions that have been made assuming the Federal
Government will make good on its commitments for funds it has
obligated. When can Blue Bird expect an answer?
Secretary Wright. This summer, I think, is the timeframe
that we will get to ---
Senator Ossoff. This summer like June, this summer like
July, this summer like August?
Secretary Wright. I can't get you that date right now, but
it will be done this summer.
Senator Ossoff. And you understand, Mr. Secretary, the cost
of prolonged uncertainty, especially for these private
companies, yes?
Secretary Wright. I do. And if you reviewed the portfolio
of things I have looked at that don't check the boxes you
talked about, you would understand why I can't just send out
hundreds of millions of dollars of taxpayer money to bridges to
nowhere.
Senator Ossoff. I am asking you to make good on obligations
that have already been made to the State of Georgia. We will
follow up on this directly as well.
Thank you so much.
Senator Kennedy. Senator Hagerty.
Senator Hagerty. I want to thank you, Chairman Kennedy,
Vice Chair Murray, for holding this meeting.
And Secretary Wright, it is wonderful to see you here. I
have enjoyed getting to know you, and I am so pleased that
someone with your expertise and background is playing the role
that you are for our Nation. You and I have discussed this
before, but the United States is at a pivotal moment in energy
production. It is not just for our Nation; it is for the entire
world. But before I go on, I would be remiss if I didn't thank
you for coming to visit my home State of Tennessee just days
after you were confirmed as U.S. Secretary of Energy.
I was pleased to be there with you in East Tennessee, and I
think you know Tennessee has been at the forefront of what you
have called yourself as the Manhattan Project 2.0, and I was
very pleased to introduce you there, and to talk about how we
can leverage the deep technological expertise that we have
there in our home State, as you take this Department and lead
our Nation toward a new energy future.
I think if we look toward the critical advancements in
artificial intelligence, and quantum computing, advanced
manufacturing, they will define the 21st century. And all of
these technologies require massive amounts of energy to
succeed. So, you are really at the cusp of what it is going to
take for our Nation to remain at the forefront and create the
competitive advantage necessary for us to dominate future
technologies. It is going to take strong leadership and energy.
And if we fail, I think the U.S. really risks ceding ground
to adversaries, like the Chinese Communist Party. But I really
believe that, as you have described, America is at the
threshold of an American golden age in energy, and that
revolution is going to happen with your leadership.
SMALL MODULAR REACTORS
I would like to turn to a specific point that we have
discussed, that is, small module reactors. They are widely seen
as the future of nuclear technology because they address the
biggest challenges that have held back traditional nuclear
power. And by that, I mean specifically cost, scale,
flexibility, time to deployment. Tennessee right now is the
nation--has the nation's only early permit for an SMR (Small
Modular Reactor).
And just yesterday the Tennessee Valley Authority submitted
their construction permit application to the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission. And as we explore SMR deployment at the Clinch
River site and through partnership with the Oak Ridge National
Lab, I am very hopeful that Tennessee can become the catalyst
for the United States' nuclear energy resurgence.
But if we could zoom out a bit, Secretary Wright, I would
like to ask you how you see nuclear energy, particularly SMRs,
playing a central role in advancing and achieving American
energy dominance and grid reliability over the next decade?
Secretary Wright. Oh. I think it is critical, Senator. As
you and I have discussed before, it is the critical technology
that could scale wildly beyond where it is today, which is just
electricity production, into huge-scale electricity production
and process heat, an even larger, more critical source of
energy to make everything in the globe possible. So, I am all
in with you on advancing nuclear.
If I can give an analogy, Senator Hagerty, you talked about
the stress we need a lot more energy to meet this AI challenge.
To give an analogy, imagine if the Military, the Department of
Defense, set out a quote to the defense companies and said: We
want to buy tanks. We will pay full price for high-performance
tanks, but you can deliver us a tank that only moves some of
the time, maybe when the sun is shining, and it only will shoot
maybe when the wind is blowing. And so, it is an
underperforming tank, but we will pay you full price for it.
And further, we will give you a subsidy to build the factory to
build these tanks.
So, what do you think is going to happen, right? You are
going to get paid to deliver an inferior tank. Of course, you
are going to do it. And then what happens to your army? It is
not just the poor kids that are in those tanks, it is the kids
that are in all the other tanks that now have underperforming
partners in the battle that are at risk. That is what we have
done to our electricity grid. We have burdened electric,
nuclear, and natural gas--and all our dispatchable energy
sources, with an unreliable, turns on sometime, turns off the
other time, not there when you need it at peak demand, but yet
we pay at the same price and we subsidize the development of
it.
It has not only made the grid more expensive, it has
hampered the advancement of dispatchable energy technologies.
Senator Hagerty. Right.
Secretary Wright. Nuclear is the one that could burst
through, but we need to fix some problems.
Senator Hagerty. To stay on this, I know you have thought
this through, but what steps is your Department taking then,
regarding SMRs, to deal with regulatory hurdles, the financial
hurdles, the technological hurdles that may be in the way of
further SMR, or more rapid SMR development?
Secretary Wright. Specifically, in our purview, we have
offered up DOE lands for test and demonstration projects: Come
do it on our land. We are building test facilities at the Idaho
National Lab so you can bring your reactor and test it in a
containment dome that is on DOE thing. Just through normal
processes, this stuff just happens just deathly slow. And then
I am very passionate about wanting to use the Loan Program
Office because the developers of these reactors are going to be
grade-A credit hyperscalers that are buying the power or other
things. But there is just not debt capital for these new
reactors.
I want to get grade-A equity capital. I want to match it
with LPO debt to get shovels in the ground and start building
these reactors, because as we build them, the costs will come
down.
Senator Hagerty. Absolutely.
Secretary Wright. The reliability, they will be
commercially bankable. We will get to a great place. But
relaunching the nuclear industry is not going to be trivial,
and your efforts, and I hope the DOE efforts, it is going to
take all of us to make it happen, but huge upside for all of us
if we do it.
Senator Hagerty. Well, I think the members of this
committee as your partners in that regard.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Secretary Wright. Thank you, Senator.
Senator Kennedy. Senator Peters.
GRID RELIABILITY
Senator Peters. Well, thank you, Mr. Chairman. Secretary
Wright, just this past weekend, severe storms knocked out power
for over 150,000 Michiganders in West Michigan. This comes only
literally a few short weeks after an ice storm left as many as
300,000 people without power across northern Michigan, as well
as a large part of our Upper Peninsula. Events like these, as
you know as well, are becoming too common, especially in
Michigan, but all across the country. So, I think it is very
clear that power infrastructure is in dire need of upgrades,
particularly resiliency, given the fact that storms are coming
at greater frequency and are more severe than we have seen in
the past.
So simply put, we just have to invest in the grid. And
actually, this is something I think we all agree on in a
bipartisan way. And believe it or not, even here in Congress,
we have come together to agree on that. I think it is one of
the few things. And it was part of the infrastructure law that
we passed, that we allocated much-needed funding on a
bipartisan basis to address grid resilience nationwide.
But from what I am hearing in my State, and this is my
concern, the Department of Energy has been unwilling to
communicate with grant selectees or allow this funding out the
door to let them start this critical work, especially as people
are out of power. The frustration is that they call, and they
basically get no answer, no response whatsoever. You have
basically gone dark. And that is incredibly disappointing,
given folks are living in the dark, and then you are dark in
terms of even trying to come back with any kind of answer.
So, all I want to know is why. I don't want to hear that it
is because you are reviewing everything all over again, because
right now the Department of Energy is sitting on their hands,
and there are folks in my State that are still waiting,
literally, for the lights to come back on. So please tell me
what has kept the Department of Energy, under your watch, from
communicating, simply communicating, with those selected to
receive these grid resilience grants? And when do you expect to
be disbursing funds so that these projects can get underway?
Secretary Wright. Well, I would love the phone numbers,
because I am not aware of any unreturned phone calls. So, if
you have got companies in your thing, please, you can hand me
the phone numbers right now. We will call them today. So, we
are engaged with all the counterparties on our deals that are
going on. We are gathering information, we are gathering data;
we are communicating. For things that are already awarded and
work is in progress, we are paying our bills.
We are getting a little bit of additional information from
companies because the vast majority of the counterparties never
delivered a business plan, never delivered something credible,
but yet they were given a vague promise of funding. We have
continued to fund the things that are in place. But there has
clearly been an abuse of tens of billions of dollars of
taxpayer money, and I want to make sure that when we are
sending money to someone, there really is a business on the
other end, they are really going to have a product that is
viable at the end--and that that product is going to benefit
the American taxpayers at the end.
We are all for those things. Grid reliability is right in
the wheelhouse. So, I think, you know, there have been all
sorts of things about how we have cancelled everything. They
are just not true.
Senator Peters. Well, I am hearing that. So, I will take
you up on an offer.
Secretary Wright. Yes.
Senator Peters. Let us know. Our team will follow up with
your team. I appreciate your commitment to make those calls. I
can tell you, at least the ones that have come to me are very
credible institutions and companies. And so, there is a real
problem there, and it raises a real alarm for me. So, I
appreciate your willingness to get on the phone or get whoever
you have to get on the phone, and we will follow up later today
or tomorrow.
Secretary Wright. Thanks for raising that. We absolutely
want to connect. I can assure you, no one at the DOE is sitting
on their hands and just ignoring people's phone calls. That is
just not the way we roll.
FISCAL YEAR 2026 BUDGET REQUEST
Senator Peters. Well, good. Let us get to the bottom of
that. I also see the President's budget calls for the
cancellation of over $15 billion of bipartisan infrastructure
funding. And in there, there is a brief description
accompanying that cut, the $15 billion cut, mentioning, quote,
``battery makers'' end of quote. That makes me think you are
referring to the Battery Manufacturing and Recycling Grants
Program, or the Battery Materials Processing Grant Program.
If so, I hope you know that that could mean hundreds of
good-paying jobs that are going on in Michigan right now, a lot
of incredible work in batteries. In fact, there was a recent
announcement you may have seen from General Motors, that new
battery chemistry they are announcing, with incredibly longer
range, lightweight, uses less critical minerals, exciting
things that are happening. So, to see this is concerning.
So, I want to know, is that what the President's skinny
budget sets out to do? Zero out the Battery Manufacturing and
Recycling Grants Program, and the Battery Materials Processing
Grants Program? And if so, should I take that to mean that
domestic manufacturing is not a priority for the
administration?
Secretary Wright. Domestic manufacturing is absolutely a
priority for the administration, absolutely. One clarification
too--sorry--not provided there. That $15 billion you mentioned,
right there, none of that is committed to any company. There is
no counterparty on that. That is just non-placed funds.
Senator Peters. So, it is not going to be cut. We are
hearing that it----
Secretary Wright. That is not cuts to any business----
Senator Peters. The President budget calls for the
cancellation of over $15 billion, so.
Secretary Wright. Because it has been unallocated. It
hasn't been committed to anyone, and their proposed budget is
to rescind it back to the Treasury.
Senator Peters. So, for this company, it is not coming
back, it is gone. That money is going to be rescinded back?
Secretary Wright. Yes, that is the proposed budget, but it
is not for any existing current projects.
Senator Peters. We will follow up with you on that as well.
Secretary Wright. Yes. Thank you, Senator.
Senator Kennedy. Senator Merkley.
Senator Merkley. Well, thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
If I understand right, you said you have not met a single
nuclear company that is----
[Off mic]
Senator Merkley [continuing]. I have all those--those over
60 sometimes have a little technical problem--that is talking
about the importance of public funding. Is that right?
Secretary Wright. Wait. Say that again? Sorry, Senator
Merkley?
NUCLEAR ENERGY
Senator Merkley. You said you have not met a single nuclear
company that is talking about the importance of public funding?
Secretary Wright. No, I think--I may have been unclear. But
what I responded to was I don't know of any nuclear company
that said to me or anyone at our Department: Hey, you are
pulling back. We are less likely to invest. I have been talking
to everyone who will listen and everyone who visits about how
we can work with nuclear companies to get things going, to help
their project in all different avenues. In fact, I think we
have been called the most constructive administration with the
nuclear industry ever.
Senator Merkley. Yes, so I just wanted--if that had been
your statement, it seemed out of sync with the fact that just
this month, the state of the nuclear energy industry was one of
the platforms that was hyper focused on Federal policies and
programs that expand nuclear generation, an event that you had
attended. So that does fit, then?
Secretary Wright. I mean, I have attended a number of
nuclear events. One of them was yesterday or the day before, is
that the event you are talking about?
Senator Merkley. Well, I was just trying to clarify because
I think maybe the way it came out of your--maybe the way you
had phrased it, didn't seem consistent with the record. But I
think you have clarified it. Thank you.
Okay. And I know, for example, one company that was founded
in Oregon has really advocated for public funding for the SMR,
this is the NuScale company, and they have got a lot of funding
over time to help them get through the Nuclear Regulatory
process.
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY PROJECTS--SCHOOLS
Turning to a challenge in my State: I have a small school
district in Mosier, a tiny, tiny town in the Columbia Gorge,
that has a-hundred-year-old building, and they got a grant to
be able to redo their HVAC system. And they were very excited,
it was actually a small school, often does not have a grant
writer. They did not have a grant writer, the parent of one of
the students wrote the grant. So, for them to be one of only 24
schools that got this was like a whopping big deal of
celebration.
You can imagine the problems with a-hundred-year-old
school, asbestos, and so on, and so forth. And so then, with
the change of administration, they were first told that the
funds were frozen. And then they were told they are not frozen,
but they then could not reach a point of contact on how to
proceed. And I know you have lost--well, let go a lot of staff,
but there was no way to like: How do we go forward?
And then they proceeded to hear that, okay, they did reach
a contact, and they were told that a final decision has not
been made yet. And then they were told that they have to get
DOE to approve their contractors. And so, this has just been,
it is like one step to another of just a complete bureaucratic
nightmare over the last 3 months. And can you have your team
get these contractors approved and let this school get their
project done?
Secretary Wright. Senator, absolutely. We will check into
that right away. You know, we are here to serve the communities
and serve the businesses of the country. So, I am not familiar
with this story, but if you have marked----hopefully one of my
staff has written down the name of the school, and we will dive
onto it.
Senator Merkley. And we will get you a whole page on it.
Secretary Wright. Thank you.
Senator Merkley. Because the contractor was ready to go.
The school that did not have much money has already done
upfront costs, are just hanging out there. And it is a mess.
And one of your staff members could hopefully, like: Okay,
done. You have got a responsible contractor, you are free to
go. Go for it.
And second, Frontier Oregon, which is the term we use for
even more rural than rural, we have a Grant School District, it
is a school district that includes John Day, a town that just
lost its lumber mill, one that Senator Wyden and I had strived
for years and years to keep open through a special agreement
for the delivery of logs. Unfortunately, the owner wants to
retire. They are tied up trying to figure out the transition.
But here is the school district, and it is also stuck in
kind of a crazy space. So, without taking up your time with all
the details, Grant County School District, the school district,
can we get someone on your team to work with them to clear this
up and let them--they have a--it is also an HVAC issue?
Secretary Wright. Yes, Senator. Thanks for raising that.
Thanks for raising that. Sorry for their experiences.
BONNEVILLE POWER AUTHORITY STAFFING
Senator Merkley. So, I wanted to turn to Bonneville Power
Authority. Bonneville controls dozens of dams, a huge amount of
electricity. They have to integrate wind energy, solar energy,
meanwhile, on the Columbia River, they have the challenge of
enough water for the barges to take the wheat to market. They
have a challenge of the salmon. I mean, it is one of the most
complicated--am I past 5 minutes already?
Senator Kennedy. That is okay.
Senator Merkley. Can you give me another moment?
Senator Kennedy. Everybody else went over. You go ahead and
go over too.
Senator Merkley. All right, thank you. So, they had a bunch
of people fired who are probationary. And we said: Oh, man,
this is such a complicated area. And they need these employees,
and some of them, I think 80 were rehired, but we have not
gotten exact numbers. But then we had lost 200 in the first
buyout. Another 160 have taken the second buyout, maybe that
you have not approved those yet. Here is the thing, this is
such a complicated system. We were really stunned by these
whole initial firings, and the first buyout, because these are
really experienced people doing really complicated systems. And
so, was there careful analysis beforehand of the challenges
they would face with the strategy of the buyouts?
Secretary Wright. With the buyouts, we have a clause that
we need to approve them, and I think we have tried not to
approve any in the power marketing administrations because they
were short-handed when we arrived in this administration. So,
they have been voluntary programs. They should not have even
been extended the offer--they were probably extended the offer
the second go-round, but the hope is not to lose more people
from there.
Senator Merkley. Well, I was surprised in the hearing last
week with Dan Newhouse that your response was you had just
recently heard about their shortage. And this is such a
complicated system, I encourage any strategies of buyouts or
firings to do the analysis up front, especially when so many
experienced people are needed to keep the grid functioning, and
the water level right, and the salmon rules followed, et
cetera, in such a system.
Secretary Wright. The dams are critical. Bonneville is
critical. I agree, Senator.
Senator Merkley. Thank you. And by the way, they are still
under a Federal hiring freeze, which is handicapping their
ability to fill in the expertise that they need to replace the
people who took the first buyout.
Secretary Wright. We will look into that.
Senator Merkley. Thank you.
Secretary Wright. We will look into that.
Senator Kennedy. Senator Murray, do you have anything else?
Senator Murray. I just have a couple comments. You have
heard from my side, one after the other, of contracts that were
canceled or frozen. These are real. You said no grants are
frozen, no invoices unpaid. I don't know if you are not paying
attention, or you have not seen it. But I just want to remind
you, it is illegal to ignore the clear directions of Congress.
These are programs, spending bills that we passed through this
committee. They were signed into law. And if you are not--if
you are canceling them, or freezing them, or whatever, that is
impoundment, and it is illegal.
And I don't raise that concern lightly. I am deeply
concerned, and we are hearing the same stories over and over
again. I do have a list. You said you have not seen any. I will
submit it for the record, of canceled and frozen grants. These
are just a handful that we know about. So, we expect your
office to follow through and to do it quickly.
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY SPEND PLAN
Secondly, on the CR (Continuing Resolution) spend plan.
That was required within 45 days. That is by law. Your
Department still has not given that to us. And again, I don't
raise this lightly. This committee, all of our committees, need
to know where that money is going, where it is being spent.
Hanford site is on the brink of having to lay off
subcontractors and restart an entire reprocurement process on
an important project because they are being directed now to
hold off on implementing projects at fiscal year 2025 spend
levels.
So, this is not efficient. And Congress requires that. And
we need those fixed. So that is really critical. And we expect
a real response not, you know, a nice little phrase.
And finally, on communication, you have heard it from
several people. I appreciate that you are telling everybody,
call my office we will call you back. But two-way communication
is two-way communication. You told me you would pick up the
phone whenever, but we are not getting calls back. People are
not getting calls back. And I think it is really important that
you know that. I know you told some people that you were too
busy, but you told me to call whenever. I have tried to get in
touch with you. It took us a month and a half to get a call
scheduled. So, communication is not, you know: Someday I will
call you back. It is unacceptable.
RESPONSE TO LETTERS
And I do want to enter seven letters into the record that I
have sent with colleagues over the past several months
requesting information about what is going on at DOE, radio
silence until yesterday. That was convenient. So, we need to
get responses back to those letters. And I want to be on record
saying that communication is not ignoring us.
[The information follows:]
[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]
Senator Murray. Again, thank you very much for being here
today.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I look forward to it. We have got
a lot of work ahead of us.
LOAN PROGRAM OFFICE
Senator Kennedy. Thank you, Senator.
Mr. Secretary, I want to go back to some of your earlier
testimony, be sure I heard it correctly. The 76-day period you
are talking about, that is the period between the time that
President Trump was elected and President Biden left office; is
that right?
Secretary Wright. That is correct.
Senator Kennedy. And during that short period of time, 76
days, how much taxpayer money went out the door of the
Department of Energy?
Secretary Wright. From the Loan Program Office in loans and
commitments; $93 billion, well over twice as much as in the
previous 15 years.
Senator Kennedy. So how do you vet and do due diligence on
a loan in 76 days, one loan, much less $93 billion? How do you
do it?
Secretary Wright. I think it is probably pretty clear it
was not done in many cases. As I mentioned, I am told I am
holding back clearly in-place stuff. There is lots of funds
that have gone out the door and commitments that were made from
businesses that provided no business plan, no numbers about
their own financial solvency or how this project can actually
work.
Senator Kennedy. So, you are telling me that the Department
of Energy, in a 76-day period, before their boss was going to
leave office, gave or loaned money to entities that had no
business plan?
Secretary Wright. Correct.
Senator Kennedy. No financials?
Secretary Wright. Correct. A number of those were not--were
before the 76-day period as well. I have come in with great
concern about how this institution, this great American
institution, has been run and how American taxpayer money has
been handled. I am sorry everyone is upset that we are taking
some time to do it, but what we have seen and what the record
shows----
Senator Kennedy. I am not upset. I am not upset, could it
be that--a lot of people say you have not returned your calls,
could it be that you and your colleagues have returned the
calls, but the people calling just did not like the answer?
Could that be a possibility?
Secretary Wright. I am not aware of that. You know, I give
my cell phone number to any Senator that wants it.
Senator Kennedy. I know you do.
Secretary Wright. And I return my calls.
Senator Kennedy. I mean, has your Department gone dark?
Somebody said your Department has gone dark. Is it dark over
there?
Secretary Wright. It doesn't look dark behind me.
Senator Kennedy. I don't see any of you sitting on your
hands. Somebody made that charge. I see everybody's hands. Let
me ask you something else, Mr. Secretary, does anybody ever
come to the Department of Energy to get some of this free money
and lie to you?
Secretary Wright. I have not experienced that, but I think
it is a reasonable assumption that that has happened.
Senator Kennedy. Does anybody ever come to you, or is it
conceivable that some of these folks that heard about this free
money came to you with a half-baked idea?
Secretary Wright. I think it is very conceivable. In fact,
I have seen such plans that were half-baked, it would be
charitable.
Senator Kennedy. You are seeing plans about that didn't
have a business plan, right?
Secretary Wright. Correct; a promise to develop one, to
find a location.
Senator Kennedy. Just give me the money and I will develop
the plan later.
Secretary Wright. Correct.
Senator Kennedy. And now you are going back through not
money that has already been contracted, but you are going back
through and checking each one of these loans and these grants
to make sure there was no stealing, aren't you?
Secretary Wright. We are. We are.
Senator Kennedy. And to make sure there was no
incompetence, aren't you? Is that correct?
Secretary Wright. We are looking at that, and yes, my blood
pressure is rising right now just thinking about what we have
seen and what did happen at the Department.
Senator Kennedy. And you are going to tell some of these
boondoggles no, aren't you?
Secretary Wright. That is correct.
Senator Kennedy. And they are going to be upset, aren't
they?
Secretary Wright. That is correct.
Senator Kennedy. And they ought to be upset, shouldn't
they?
Secretary Wright. I don't think they should be upset. I
think they should be ashamed.
Senator Kennedy. I am--it is rare that I am speechless, but
I want to be sure I understood. The people running the
Department of Energy for President Biden's administration
shoveled $93 billion, not million, $93 billion out the door in
76 days. And it just happened to be the time between when
President Trump was elected and President Biden, their boss,
was leaving; is that right?
Secretary Wright. It is correct and distasteful, confidence
undermining.
Senator Kennedy. My, God. Look, I hope you take whatever
time you need to go through all of these projects penny by
penny. I mean, I have heard this testimony today, well, it will
cost jobs in my State. If somebody steals $50 million and goes
and spends the money in their State, that is going to stimulate
the economy, isn't it?
Secretary Wright. Yes, it will.
Senator Kennedy. But it is still stealing, isn't it? And it
is still illegal, isn't it?
Secretary Wright. Yes.
Senator Kennedy. I mean, they were spending money at the
Department of Energy like it was ditch water. Their budget went
from $60 billion to $160 billion since fiscal year 2021. It
just sounds to me like there were a lot of people coming to the
Department of Energy who had all four feet and their snout in
the trough. And I hope you will turn down the boondoggles and
refer the thieves to the Department of Justice.
Secretary Wright. We will indeed. Senator, the one
complication in there, too, is mixed in there are good
companies doing good things, honestly, with credible plans.
Senator Kennedy. And you are trying to separate the wheat
from the chaff?
Secretary Wright. Yes, that is what we are trying to do.
That is our job, and we are doing it. But there is a lot of
chaff.
STAFFING AT DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Senator Kennedy. Let me ask you one final question, let me
go back to how many employees you have now. There have been
some allegations today that you have cut tens of thousands of
employees. Is that accurate?
Secretary Wright. Well, I think the allegations were
thousands, and our headcount will ultimately be reduced by
thousands. But we are doing it slowly.
Senator Kennedy. You have 16,000 now?
Secretary Wright. Yes.
Senator Kennedy. And you think you can do it with fewer
than 16,000?
Secretary Wright. Correct.
Senator Kennedy. What is wrong with that?
Secretary Wright. I think it is just common-sense business.
Senator Kennedy. Yes. Businesses do it every day in the
real world.
Secretary Wright. American taxpayers deserve it.
Senator Kennedy. That has never happened in the Federal
Government. I mean, it is easier to divorce your spouse than to
get rid of a Federal employee up here. That is not the way the
world works, is it, Mr. Secretary?
Secretary Wright. It is not the way the world should work.
And I give enormous credit to President Trump, who had the
boldness to say if there is a right thing that needs to be done
and it is difficult, please do it. And so, yes, this is new
territory. This is not what happens normally in the Federal
Government. But it is what needs to happen periodically in the
Federal Government.
And I give the credit to President Trump, who is willing to
take the heat and has set the Departments free, make the
changes you need to make to better serve American taxpayers and
American consumers. And across his administration, that is what
is being done.
Senator Kennedy. All right. On that note, I just wanted to
clear that up, Mr. Secretary, because I--you know, I don't know
you to be a person who does not return his phone calls or take
care of business. And my guess is you don't tolerate people
around you who take a cavalier approach to their job. And I
wanted to get that on the record. I applaud you for being able
to do the job with fewer people.
Thank you for being here today, thank you to all your
staff. You all can't take the rest of the day off, it is
still----
[Laughter.]
ADDITIONAL COMMITTEE QUESTIONS
Senator Kennedy. The hearing record is going to remain open
for a week. Some Senators may send you additional questions.
They might submit additional information for the record within
that time. It is their prerogative. If they have questions, I
hope you will try to answer them in a reasonable amount of
time. I want to thank you for being here today.
[The following questions were not asked at the hearing, but
were submitted to the Department for response subsequent to the
hearing:]
Questions Submitted to Hon. Christopher Wright
Questions Submitted by Senator Mitch McConnell
Question. The U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources
led a successful, bipartisan effort last year in passing the Nuclear
Fuel Security Act of 2023 (NFSA) and the Prohibiting Russian Uranium
Imports Act, both of which have been enacted into law. Specifically,
the NFSA directed the U.S. Department of Energy to `` . . . promote
diversity of supply in domestic uranium mining, conversion, enrichment,
and deconversion capacity and technologies, including new capacity,
among U.S. nuclear energy companies.''
Given efforts being undertaken with regards to the Department's
Request for Proposals (RFP) for Low-Enriched Uranium (LEU) Enrichment
Acquisition--can you commit that this program is working to promote a
diversity of supply and technologies among companies that can provide
LEU, additive uranium, and conversion supply to meet the needs of the
existing nuclear fleet?
Answer. The Department of Energy's Office of Nuclear Energy is
continuing forward with Request for Proposals (RFP) for Low-Enriched
Uranium (LEU) Enrichment Acquisition, which are intended to spur
additional domestic LEU production capacity, reduce reliance on Russian
nuclear fuel, and ensure LEU demand is met through trusted sources.
DOE/NE is working to meet this goal, which includes diversity of supply
in the uranium fuel supply chain.
______
Questions Submitted by Senator Lindsey Graham
MESC
Question. I appreciate the administration's commitment to ensuring
taxpayer dollars are used responsibly and the backlog of grants left by
the previous Administration. Can you provide an update on the expected
timeline for a signed agreement with the following South Carolina
applicants:
--TS Conductor
--Mercedes Benz Vans
--Ice Air (DE-MS0000059)
Answer. TS Conductor (DE-MS0000125)--MESC has a signed agreement
with TS Conductor, as a fully conditioned award ($61,849,328 total
project, $28,248,485 DOE share) that is not yet authorized to begin
work, as it still requires finalization of the project's terms and
timeline. DOE is continuing to conduct a thorough review of this
project and is analyzing the responses to a recent data request. DOE is
working expeditiously to complete this review in a timely manner.
Mercedes Benz Vans (DE-MS0000155)--MESC has a signed agreement with
Mercedes Benz Vans, as a fully conditioned award ($569,983,704 total
project, $284,991,852 DOE share) that is not yet authorized to begin
work as it still requires finalization of the project's terms and
timeline. DOE is continuing to conduct a thorough review of this
project and is analyzing the responses to a recent data request. DOE is
working expeditiously to complete this review in a timely manner.
Ice Air (DE-MS0000059)--This is a standard award ($34,999,068 total
project, $17,499,534 DOE share) that has been authorized to proceed.
MESC continues to receive and pay invoices on work conducted during
Budget Period 1 (9/1/2024-9/30/2026) of the project. The project is
contingent on further NEPA review through an Environmental Assessment
and the outcome of the DOE's review of the projects including analysis
of responses from a recent data request.
For all awardees, we are moving expeditiously through the process
while conducting a diligent review. If there are any major concerns or
issues encountered through the process, it may take longer to finalize
our review. We remain committed to working with your office on these
important matters as we continue to conduct this thorough review.
Question.
LPO
Nuclear energy is critical to our national security and provides
clean reliable power across South Carolina. The U.S. Department of
Energy Loan Programs Office (LPO) plays an essential role in attracting
private capital to ensure US leadership and meet our growing energy
demand. Do you support a DOE Loan Office that has sufficient resources
to support the construction of nuclear projects in the United States?
Answer. Yes, I support a Loan Programs Office that has sufficient
resources to advance the Administration's energy dominance agenda. LPO
is one of the most efficient and high impact tools that DOE has to
support nuclear energy through financing nuclear projects in the United
States. Notably, LPO is currently disbursing a loan to Palisades, the
first restart of a nuclear reactor in U.S. history.
Question. The nation's nuclear arsenal needs modernization, and the
key to this modernization strategy is the production of no fewer than
80 war-reserve plutonium pits. The Department of Energy and the
National Nuclear Security Administration have determined that a two-
site solution is required to meet the objectives of no fewer than 80
war-reserve pits per year. The Savannah River Plutonium Processing
Facility, located at the Savannah River Site, is critical to meet the
required plutonium pit objective and is slated to produce not fewer
than 50 war-reserve pits per year. Do you commit to support all efforts
to complete the construction of the Savannah River Plutonium Processing
Facility?
Answer. Yes, I am committed to the two-site solution to produce no
fewer than 80 war reserve plutonium pits, including at the Savannah
River Plutonium Processing Facility.
Question. It has come to my attention that an organization seeks to
acquire a sizable plot of land near the Savannah River Site,
specifically near the Barnwell Gate. The Department of Energy has
expressed concern over the transfer of this land to the community, as
there is groundwater and surface contamination on the site. It is my
understanding that there was funding requested in the FY25 budget for
land transfers; however, due to the Continuing Resolution this funding
was not appropriated. Do you commit to working with me and my staff to
advancing this land transfer and site clean up?
Answer. The tract of land in question is not excess to DOE's needs
and is not available for transfer. Additionally, it is not suitable for
transfer since, as you note, contamination has leached from offsite
operations onto the area, including surface and groundwater.
Remediation would be required to protect human health prior to
excessing any land. Since the extent of the contamination is thus far
unknown, the extent and cost of such remediation is similarly unknown.
After remediation, additional activities include an environmental
baseline survey, archeological survey and report, moving/reestablishing
the site barricade and building, establishing a new boundary fence, and
revising all safety and security studies would be necessary.
Question. In December 2023, the United States imported nearly
243,000 kilograms of uranium from China, despite there being no
recorded imports from China between 2020 and 2022. Do believe the
uptick of uranium imports from China pose a national security risk? Do
you also believe China is helping Russia circumvent a ban on U.S.
imports of Russian enriched uranium?
Answer. We feel that it is critical for the United States to
establish domestic enrichment capacity to ensure that we are not
reliant on Russian uranium. It is also important that Russian shipments
are not supplanted by Chinese shipments of uranium. Therefore, DOE,
along with other Departments and Agencies continue to track shipments
of uranium from Russia and China.
Currently, foreign imports of low enriched uranium (LEU) are needed
to meet our nuclear fuel needs, until we get our domestic nuclear fuel
enterprise up and running, as directed by President Trump's executive
orders.
While some imports to the U.S. from foreign sources may be
necessary in the short-term, limiting the importation of foreign LEU
mitigates several energy and national security risks:
--Supply chain: Concern has been expressed that foreign countries may
be exporting LEU into the U.S. at below-market prices. While
the data shows a significant decline in LEU price in 2023,
there is a demonstrated history of foreign ``dumping''
(biodiesel, steel, solar panels, EVs, etc.) to undercut
domestic competitors and dominate markets.
--National Security: Upon implementation of the Prohibiting Russian
Uranium Imports Act, there has been some concern domestically
as well as from international partners that Russia may attempt
to route LEU through foreign nations, effectively ``red-
washing'' the imports. DOE and other USG agencies have been
tracking imports from foreign adversaries to ensure the proper
implementation of the ban and to prevent the circumvention of
the ban on the import of LEU into the United States.
______
Questions Submitted by Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith
Question. The U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) and the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) are investing in the
technology development of commercial radioisotope power systems (RPSs),
a technology that converts the heat from the decay of radioisotopes
into thermal and/or electrical power for national security and
scientific missions. Due to the scarcity of the existing plutonium-238
radioisotope for RPS technology from the U.S. Department of Energy,
alternative RPS technology using strontium-90 (Sr-90) is being pursued.
The Waste Encapsulation and Storage Facility (WESF) at the Hanford
Site holds the largest source of separated legacy Sr-90, with enough
Sr-90 to power up to 200 RPSs for DoD and NASA. Two studies were
completed by DOE-EM using FY21 appropriated funds, concluding that
recovering these Sr-90 capsules during the existing wet-to-dry storage
transfer effort planned by 2029 would have minimal impact on the
overall project. DoD funded $3M in FY25 to begin critical path design
and nuclear safety activities to ensure the availability of these
capsules by early FY28.
Secretary Wright, we know that costs associated with defense
nuclear waste cleanup rank as one of the largest liabilities in the
entire U.S. Government. What creative opportunities, such as the reuse
of legacy material and partnerships with the private sector, are you
pursuing to reduce these long-term liabilities at nuclear cleanup
sites?
Answer. The Department is partnering with American industry to
eliminate environmental risks in a manner that saves money and enables
beneficial reuse of materials the government does not need. Due to past
national defense activities, some EM sites are home to materials that
are suitable for beneficial reuse to enable American energy,
innovation, and jobs.
To tap into this potential, unnecessary restrictions, such as the
ban on the release on scrap metal from radiation areas and the
moratorium on the free release of volumetrically contaminated metals,
have been rolled back. This effort boosts potential reuse opportunities
for nickel stockpiles as well as other metals at EM sites, while saving
money on disposal costs--enabling a win-win for DOE, industry, and
American taxpayers.
In Oak Ridge, Tennessee the Department is drawing down our
inventory of uranium-233 while increasing the world's supply of a rare
isotope crucial for a promising form of cancer treatment by 1,500
percent. In Tennessee, we are also partnering with industry to provide
materials the Department no longer needs for radioisotope power
systems.
DOE has successfully partnered with private industry on beneficial
reuse of nuclear materials at Oak Ridge and remains open to any
potential additional opportunities at other DOE sites, including
Hanford.
The Department is also transferring land no longer needed for DOE
missions to local development authorities and governments in states
like Tennessee, Ohio, and Kentucky to grow jobs, unleash commercial
nuclear, fuel AI, expand private industry opportunities and produce
more American energy.
The Department looks forward to working with Congress on these and
other opportunities to transform liabilities into opportunities for
American energy and innovation.
Question. The President's efforts to revitalize nuclear power
production will enhance our nations' competitiveness, national
security, and prosperity. My home state of Mississippi is extremely
supportive of the Department's effort to modernize our nuclear
infrastructure, increase safety and extend the lifespan of our existing
commercial fleet. Your department has invested in Silicon Carbide
material development through the Accident Tolerant Fuel program.
Industry and Congress have been very supportive of onshoring this
critical technology innovation, but the effort has recently stalled
over seemingly bureaucratic delays, so I wanted to make sure you had
visibility on this issue.
Mr. Secretary, what is the Department's plan to implement
Congressionally allocated Silicon Carbide funding in an expedited
manner to ensure that the program is completed as directed by the
Congress?
Answer. The Department of Energy is pleased to continue to support
U.S. nuclear leadership consistent with priorities and direction
provided from Congressional appropriation. The Department has funded
multiple industry-led efforts towards the development of Silicon
Carbide (SiC) cladding concepts over a number of years. In December
2022, consistent with congressional appropriation, the Department
awarded a multi-year incrementally funded SiC development award. The
Department continues to obligate congressional appropriations on this
award and has accelerated over $8 million to date. Originally SiC was
included as a technology drive of the Accident Tolerant Fuels (ATF)
effort, however because of our near-term focus this will be now more
appropriately part of the Next Generation Fuels (NGF) effort.
______
Questions Submitted by Senator Mike Rounds
Question. The Department of Energy's support for large-scale
scientific projects, such as the Long Baseline Neutrino Facility (LBNF)
and the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE), is a prime example
of how Federal investment drives global leadership in science and
technology.
What steps can be taken to make certain the LBNF/DUNE experiment
timeline remains on track?
Answer. LBNF/DUNE is critical to maintaining U.S. leadership in
particle physics. When completed, it will be the foremost neutrino
experiment in the world. To successfully deliver the project on time
and schedule, DOE will continue to emphasize sound project management,
proactive risk management, and clear communication with all
stakeholders. Given the scale and complexity of LBNF/DUNE,
international partnerships are also critical to its success.
Question. The Sanford Underground Research Facility (SURF) in South
Dakota plays a critical role in the LBNF/DUNE mission. As the deepest
underground laboratory in the country, it hosts groundbreaking research
in dark matter and neutrino physics. Would you being willing to visit
the SURF facility?
Answer. The Sanford Underground Research Facility (SURF) in Lead,
South Dakota, is important for advancing fundamental physics research.
As the deepest underground laboratory in the United States, its depth
provides natural shielding from cosmic rays, creating an unparalleled
environment for highly sensitive experiments. This shielding is
critical for detecting elusive particles like neutrinos and for
searching for dark matter without interference from background
radiation. DOE supports SURF through a cooperative agreement to foster
underground science experiments that require this unique environment.
Currently, SURF hosts groundbreaking research, including the LUX-ZEPLIN
(LZ) experiment, which is actively searching for dark matter and has
world-leading sensitivity in the search for dark matter particles. The
LBNF/DUNE project is also under construction at SURF, further
underscoring the facility's unique role in cutting-edge experiments. I
hope to visit SURF in the future to see the innovative science being
performed in this unique environment.
Question. A number of scientists have considered thorium as a
potential alternative fuel for nuclear energy production. Countries
such as India, China, and Canada have shown significant interest in
thorium-related research. In the past year, China has successfully
developed a thorium-fueled reactor. The Department of Energy has
conducted some analysis of thorium as a reactor fuel at its national
laboratories. Would you consider expanding research into the potential
of thorium-fueled reactors?
Answer. The Department of Energy, as a premier U.S. research and
development (R&D) organization, is pleased to execute far reaching R&D
towards alternative nuclear fuel technologies. In fact, this is an area
that DOE has studied in the past.
In 2023, the Department, as directed by the Energy Act of 2020,
completed an initial assessment of nuclear fuel options other than
uranium; ``Alternate Fuels: Thorium and Uranium-233.'' The report
discusses holistically the historical use of Thorium in light water
reactors (LWR) and Non-LWRs.
Ultimately, with limited USG resources, there isn't a sufficient
economic driver associated with thorium. Nonetheless, China will not
gain a military advantage over the United States by utilizing thorium
reactor technology, as the U.S. military is currently and actively
evaluating the realistic, near-term potential of deploying advanced
reactor technology to power DoD facilities, as directed by President
Trump's recent nuclear Executive Orders. But with the absence of an
economic driver to establish commercial thorium fuel infrastructure and
with the current abundance of domestic uranium, U.S. Government
investment in a thorium fuel cycle is not warranted at this time. If a
need for thorium fuel emerges in the future, this position may be
revisited. Moreover, the proliferations risks associated with thorium
fuels would also need to be addressed.
As such, the Department currently is focused on uranium fueled
technologies; however, the Department continues to monitor
developments.
Question. Numerous electric cooperatives in South Dakota have been
awarded funding through the Grid Resilience and Innovation Partnerships
(GRIP) program. These cooperatives intend to utilize the funding to
address the increasing demand for transmission capacity in the region.
It is my understanding that the Department of Energy's review of grant
programs may be affecting the GRIP initiative. Could you please provide
an update on when recipients of GRIP Round 1 and GRIP Round 2 funding
might expect to hear back from the DOE regarding this matter?
Do you believe the purpose of the GRIP program aligns with the
Trump administration's energy goals?
Answer. DOE has implemented a new policy to ensure responsibility
for DOE's financial assistance that identifies waste of taxpayer
dollars, protects America's national security and advances President
Trump's commitment to unleash affordable, reliable and secure energy.
DOE is committed to conducting a thorough review of these projects
under its existing authorities to ensure they are among other things,
financially sound and economically viable, aligned with national and
economic security interests, and consistent with Federal law and this
Administration's policies.
______
Questions Submitted by Senator Patty Murray
Question. As the only DOE National Laboratory stewarded by EERE,
NREL delivers the scientific knowledge and innovations that advance
energy technologies, systems, and markets. Its unique strength lies in
developing and integrating technologies into robust, resilient
systems--bridging foundational research with practical applications to
lower energy costs, drive economic growth, bolster national security,
and deliver abundant and reliable energy. Indeed, NREL is the United
States' energy systems laboratory. Top-line funding consistent with
enacted Fiscal Year 2024 levels for EERE is essential to safeguarding
NREL's workforce, infrastructure, and cutting-edge capabilities--and to
maintaining the United States' global leadership in science and
technology. In Fiscal Year 2024, 64 percent of NREL's funding came from
EERE programs, most of it for research and development (R&D).
Will you commit to protecting the R&D funding flowing to NREL at
levels consistent with FY24?
Answer. The National Labs are the engines that drive research and
development. We can both increase efficiency and drive innovation. EERE
will prioritize research that supports true technological
breakthroughs, which will maintain America's global competitiveness.
Question. EERE's Facilities and Infrastructure (F&I) Program
ensures that NREL's existing research and support infrastructure is
maintained and upgraded, helping to attract world-class scientists and
develop innovative solutions to our most pressing energy challenges.
The program supports maintenance and repair, operational readiness for
safeguards and security, environment, safety, health, and quality
(ESHQ), and general plant projects--as well as the operation of EERE's
high-performance computing and NREL's Energy Systems Integration
Facility (ESIF).
Will you commit to funding EERE's F&I Program at FY24 levels?
Answer. EERE's FY26 request for Facilities and Infrastructure to
operate and maintain NREL decreases by only 5% from FY24 to FY26. This
funding ensures continuity of essential laboratory operations. The
request provides direct funding for operational activities of major
facilities and infrastructure and site-wide investments, including the
continued construction of the Energy Materials and Processing at Scale
(EMAPS) facilities.
Question. NREL is in the final stage of constructing its Energy
Materials and Processing at Scale (EMAPS) facility, which will
accelerate the transition from scientific breakthroughs to commercial
applications through collaboration with industry partners,
universities, and other DOE labs. As global competitors like China
invest heavily in their science and technology ecosystems, these
capabilities are vital to meeting U.S. energy needs and sustaining
leadership. Any reductions or delays in EMAPS funding could result in
higher costs to taxpayers.
Do you support NREL's EMAPS construction, and are you prepared to
fully leverage the facility to keep pace with global science and
technology competitors such as China?
Answer. EERE's FY26 request for Facilities and Infrastructure
includes the continued construction of the Energy Materials and
Processing at Scale (EMAPS) facility.
Question. With rumors circulating about downsizing or disbanding
EERE--and at a time of increasing demand across the energy system--
there is growing concern that the Department's reorganization could
leave its energy systems laboratory without a clear steward. In FY24,
64 percent of NREL's funding came from EERE's R&D and F&I programs,
including every dollar of the critical Facilities and Infrastructure
Program.
In your reorganization of DOE, where will stewardship of NREL--one
of the ``Crown Jewels'' of American scientific innovation, to use your
words--reside?
Answer. At this time, there has been no announcement of any plans
to reorganize the Department.
Question. At your confirmation hearing, you stated that grid
stability is your ``single biggest concern.'' This is no small
challenge. Our electric grid is under increasing stress, with energy
demand accelerating at an unprecedented pace due to AI and the
proliferation of data centers. Research and development in energy
systems will be critical to addressing this challenge--from smarter
grid planning and modeling to advanced technologies that manage grid-
related threats.
Will you commit to funding and prioritizing research and innovation
in grid resiliency, reliability, affordability, and energy systems
integration--areas where NREL plays a critical role?
Answer. Research and innovation in grid resilience, reliability,
affordability, and energy systems integration are key priorities for
the Office of Electricity and we commit to supporting them consistently
with the President's energy dominance agenda and within the scope of
appropriated funding levels and Congressional direction we receive.
Question. I have concerns about reports that DOE is undergoing an
unprecedented reduction in staffing, with many employees facing forced
retirements, administrative leave, or termination. Additionally, the
Administration has extended a Federal hiring freeze until July 15. The
reductions and hiring freeze are reportedly affecting program offices
essential to implementing existing laws and managing awarded funds.
DOE's ability to effectively execute its statutory mission depends on
the presence of qualified, experienced personnel. A hollowed-out
workforce cannot administer the complex portfolio of Federal energy
programs Congress has funded.
How many DOE employees have been furloughed, terminated, placed on
administrative leave, or taken a deferred resignation package since
January 20, 2025?
Answer. As of the date of the hearing, DOE did not have full
resolution of the number of employees who would enter the Deferred
Resignation Program (DRP). Since January 20, 2025, DOE has not
furloughed any employees.
The Department of Energy continues to take a hard business look at
our current capabilities and how we need to evolve to meet growing
energy needs. In partnership with OMB and OPM, DOE is evaluating agency
mission and goals to ensure staff are strategically aligned to support
agency priorities.
Question. What are DOE's plans for further staffing reductions,
including through reductions in force, and which offices or program
areas will be most impacted?
Answer. As of May 21, 2025, no action has been taken to develop an
official/comprehensive reduction-in-force (RIF) plan for the Department
of Energy.
Question. Why did DOE collect workforce data from the National
Laboratories, including the number of laboratory employees and on-site
contractors, and is the Department considering reductions in force at
the National Laboratories?
Answer. DOE regularly collects workforce data because it is prudent
practice, in managing our labs, to have an understanding of the size
and composition of the workforce. Also, as directed by Executive Order
(E.O.) 14222, ``Implementing the President's 'Department of Government
Efficiency' Cost Efficiency Initiative,'' we conducted a review of all
contracts and grants in order to reduce overall spending or reallocate
spending to promote efficiency and advance Administration policies.
Reduction in force is a term allocated to only Federal employees, not
contractors. DOE is not aware of any plans from the National
Laboratories to reduce staff.
Question. How will DOE ensure continuity of services, compliance,
and oversight of active awards amid these reductions and hiring freeze?
Answer. DOE has an acquisition workforce with the knowledge, tools,
and capability to manage and oversee active awards. Internal controls
are essential and they are in place. We have also eliminated non-
essential contracts and financial assistance agreements that are no
longer effectuating program goals or agency priorities, freeing up time
for our dedicated acquisition workforce to manage existing awards.
Question. What contingency plans exist to support grantees and
contractors currently engaged in DOE-funded work, especially if their
DOE points-of-contact are no longer available?
Answer. Contracts have explicitly defined deliverables and
requirements and financial assistance agreements have clear objectives
and outcomes. Contractors and grantees should have demonstrated past
performance and expertise to appropriately deliver on their
requirements. All contracts and financial assistance awards have
Contracting and Grants Officers and Specialists to administer the
awards.
Question. Please provide an update on the Water Power Technologies
Office spend plan for the remainder of FY 2025. Additionally, provide
information on any additional carryover funds from past fiscal years
that have not yet been obligated/spent but are required to fulfill
prior commitments. TEAMER, for example?
Answer. WPTO's FY25 spend plan and plans for prior year carryover,
including plans for TEAMER, are still being finalized and undergoing
departmental review.
Question. Cuts to research, development, and deployment at DOE
destroy essential programs that allow companies to scale up new
technologies. Getting a new device from the lab to a manufacturing line
requires investment without guaranteed returns. This period is called
the ``valley of death,'' and government plays a crucial role in
shepherding companies through it during a time when private industry is
reluctant to invest due to the inherent risk. Secretary Wright and Elon
Musk both benefitted from DOE programs to get their companies over
these ``valleys of death.'' Sec. Wright invested in Fervo, which
received $5.6M from ARPA-E and up to $60M from the Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy, and in Natron, which received $19.8M
from ARPA-E SCALEUP, and was on the board of Oklo, which received $4.5M
from ARPA-E. Elon Musk's Tesla got a crucial $465M loan from the Loans
Program Office to build the factory behind its first widely available
model. Yet the President's Budget proposes cutting many of these
essential offices.
Will DOE continue to provide support to companies facing the
``valley of death?''
Answer. DOE is still evaluating awards to ensure appropriate
resources are allocated efficiently, and that the Department's
initiatives are in line with the statutory mission of DOE and the
policies and priorities of the Administration. We thank you for
understanding, as DOE is processing and evaluating all selections and
awards in accordance with all laws, regulations, and fiscal
responsibility, as efficiently as possible.
Question. How do DOE and DOGE justify these cuts given the
important role these offices played in enriching their heads?
Answer. The Department is focused on streamlining operations within
the agency to increase efficiency. We will continue to evaluate every
program and office on a case-by-case basis to ensure that we are
progressing the goal of American energy dominance as is the priority of
this Administration.
Question. Actions to freeze and rescind funding for programs
enacted under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), the
Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), and annual appropriations are deeply
troubling. These abrupt reversals--some in response to Executive Order
14154 and DOE's Secretarial Order on January 20, 2025--are causing
severe uncertainty and economic risk for energy stakeholders and
communities that depend on the continuity of these investments.
Is DOE currently honoring all legal obligations for previously
obligated and executed awards, including those at the National
Laboratories?
Answer. The Department of Energy is undertaking a review of its
entire financial assistance portfolio. Any action taken will be
consistent with the underlying statutory authority and terms of
financial awards and Federal regulations.
Question. Will non-Federal recipients be reimbursed for work
performed and invoiced prior to or during the funding freeze?
Answer. The Department of Energy will ensure that authorized
invoices are paid.
Question. Has DOE provided the required reports to Congress on
apportionment delays or violations of the Impoundment Control Act, as
outlined in Federal fiscal statutes?
Answer. The Department is committed to meeting its statutory
obligations and will follow the law.
Question. Will DOE commit to proactively updating Congress and
stakeholders on the status of affected programs and personnel?
Answer. Yes.
Question. I am concerned by DOE's new policy that sets 10 or 15%
limit to indirect costs, otherwise known as facilities and
administrative costs, for research grants. Indirect cost support is
critical to cover research-related expenses, such as laboratory
equipment, facilities, and operations critical for cutting-edge
research. Cutting off this support, especially without warning or input
from stakeholders, severely impedes research institutions' ability to
carry out the scientific work that has been authorized by Congress and
has produced critical breakthroughs we all benefit from. Further, the
ramifications of this policy will likely spread far beyond the grants
themselves--maintaining U.S. competitiveness depends on our research
institutions' world-class facilities, which are made possible through
the use of indirect costs.
How did DOE comply with required procedures, or provide appropriate
justification, to deviate from its long-standing indirect cost rate
policies?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
Question. What steps is DOE taking to ensure that changes to its
indirect cost policies do not cause immediate and irreparable injury to
our universities' capabilities to train a next-generation energy
workforce?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
Question. What are the long-term implications of this policy on the
pipeline of future scientists and researchers trained through
university programs?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
Question. Has DOE assessed the potential regional economic and
workforce consequences of capping indirect costs on state, local, and
non-profit implementation partners? If so, will DOE release that
analysis publicly?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
Question. What will happen to existing (conditional and
nonconditional) awards if they do not meet the new terms and conditions
in this policy?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
Question. What data and models did DOE use to conclude that a
uniform 10 or 15% cap would be sufficient and sustainable across such
varied institutional types (e.g., universities, local governments, non-
profits, for-profits)? Will DOE release this analysis publicly?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
Question. How does DOE justify this cap given that many
organizations and governments currently operate with indirect cost
rates significantly higher than the new proposed cap to cover essential
research infrastructure and compliance?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
Question. What outreach or consultation--if any--did DOE undertake
with university, non-profit, municipal, or private-sector stakeholders
prior to issuing these policy changes?
Answer. A Policy Flash is a communication tool used by the DOE
Office of Acquisition Management to disseminate acquisition or
financial assistance-related information, guidance, and updates to
procurement and financial assistance personnel. A Policy Flash simply
informs the contracting community of a planned course of action. A
Policy Flash is not a regulation; can be modified or cancelled at any
time; is not subject to a public comment process; and does not have the
force and effect of law. Policy Flash 2025-22 was an announcement of a
planned course of action, along with the procedure to be used--
application of a 15% indirect cost rate for grants to Institutions of
Higher Education. The Policy Flash promised that ``[a]dditional
information is forthcoming[,]'' including a ``separate notice and
guidance'' to any recipients subject to termination of awards. Some DOE
program offices sent notices to awardees after Policy Flash 2025-22 was
issued, but due to an April 16, 2025 Court order that enjoined
implementation of Policy Flash 2025-22 in any form, DOE has not pursued
implementation of the Policy Flash or the indirect cost rate specified
in it since that time.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
Question. What impact assessments has DOE conducted to understand
how this cap will affect the financial viability of ongoing and future
research projects?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
Question. Has DOE evaluated how this cap could influence the United
States' position in global research and innovation competitiveness?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
Question. How does DOE reconcile these cost caps with existing
negotiated indirect cost rates under OMB Circulars and 2 CFR 200,
particularly where they exceed the new ceilings?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
Question. What specific exemptions, waivers, or appeal mechanisms
will DOE make available for awards where capped indirect costs would
result in program delays, layoffs, or funding shortfalls?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
______
Questions Submitted by Senator Richard J. Durbin
Question. The President's ``skinny'' Budget Request calls for a
$1.15 billion cut to the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science.
The Office of Science is the primary sponsor of research in the
physical sciences, the home of 28 cutting-edge user facilities, and a
direct funder and operator of the National Labs. You previously
described our National Labs as ``the crown jewel of our nation's
scientific research,'' yet the Fiscal Year (FY) 2026 Budget Request
calls for a roughly 14 percent cut to the Labs' primary funding
mechanism. You also have claimed that DOE can, ``Do more with less.''
Meanwhile China, our chief scientific rival, is reportedly investing
tens of billions of dollars in critical technologies like artificial
intelligence, quantum computing, and critical materials. In contrast
with the 14 percent cut you propose, the Chinese government increased
its basic science budget by 10 percent last December. While China
doubles down on its scientific investments, the unprecedented cuts
proposed in the President's FY26 Budget Request suggest that America
plans to cede scientific leadership to China in these technologies and
in basic science research.
How will you ensure American scientific competitiveness with China
while gutting funding for the National Labs?
Answer. The President's Budget Request reduces funding for climate
change and Green New Scam research, but maintains U.S. competitiveness
in priority areas such as high-performance computing, artificial
intelligence, quantum information science, nuclear energy (fission and
fusion), and critical minerals. This funding level will refocus DOE's
Office of Science to its core scientific priorities and cut spending on
the previous administration's political priorities. DOE recognizes that
the national laboratories play a vital role in advancing scientific
discovery and technological innovation. They drive fundamental
discoveries that underpin future technological advancements, pushing
the boundaries of human knowledge in areas critical to national
security and economic competitiveness. Their activities bridge the gap
between basic research and practical application, translating
scientific breakthroughs into tangible technologies with real-world
impact. The President's Budget Request reflects a commitment to
responsible stewardship of taxpayer dollars, balancing broader
Administration priorities. Strategic choices must be made to ensure
resources are allocated to maximize overall benefit to the nation. This
budget reflects a commitment to prioritize national laboratory
investments that demonstrate the greatest potential for near-term
impact, preserve the foundations for scientific discovery, and align
with core administration goals.
Question. The FY26 Budget Request names quantum information science
as a priority technology area for DOE. If the National Quantum
Initiative Act is reauthorized to enable greater funding for quantum
programs and technologies through the DOE Office Science, will you
support increased appropriations to execute quantum activities at DOE?
Answer. QIS is a priority for the administration and DOE welcomes
the opportunity to discuss QIS investments across the Department's
portfolio in the context of a reauthorization of the National Quantum
Initiative (NQI) Act. In FY 2020, DOE's Office of Science established
five lab-led National Quantum Information Science (QIS) Research
Centers, as called for in the NQI Act. These centers focus on
accelerating transformational advances in basic science and quantum-
based technology needed for world-leading capabilities in QIS. In
addition to these centers, the Department of Energy, through the Office
of Science, continues to prioritize investments in quantum research
across all of its core science programs. At $329M in the Fiscal Year
2026 Request, QIS is one of the Office of Science's largest
initiatives. These investments span foundational science, application
development, and user access programs.
Question. Universities are a vital part of the science and
innovation system in Illinois and across the country. For that reason,
DOE's recent actions to restrict indirect cost recovery are a concern,
as it could reduce investments and participation by U.S. universities
in DOE's basic science programs, and limit scientific discovery. During
the hearing, I was pleased to hear your willingness to engage
universities in a constructive dialogue on this difficult issue. You
referred to an invitation from DOE to U.S. universities to engage in
such a dialogue, but there do not appear to be any public statements
from you or DOE confirming such an invitation.
Will you share all written materials, whether publicly released or
not, that solicited opportunities for dialogue with universities
regarding the departmental indirect cost policy?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
Question. What is the specific time period during which this
outreach was made, as well as the time period for responses to be
gathered, including its end date?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
Question. Were any universities proactively approached or
consulted, formally or informally, on this issue? If so, which ones?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
Question. A coalition of national organizations, including the
Association of Public and Land-Grant Universities and the Association
of American Universities, have announced an effort to develop a more
efficient and transparent indirect costs funding model. Does DOE plan
to engage with this effort?
Answer. Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-
22 regarding indirect costs for Institutes of Higher Education, the
Department of Energy (DOE) respectfully refers to its filings in Case
1:25-cv-10912-ADB in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts, and in particular, Document 47, the Opposition to the
Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed on April 22, 2025.
Due to pending litigation challenging Policy Flash PF 2025-25
regarding indirect costs for state and local governments, DOE
respectfully refers to its filings in Case No. 6:25-cv-01458-MTK in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Note: DOE has issued several policies capping indirect and fringe
costs--Policy Flashes PF 2025-25 (state and local government awards),
2025-26 (non-profit awards), and PF 2025-27 (for-profit awards). These
policy flashes operate differently from Policy Flash PF 2025-22 in that
they do not prescribe a fixed indirect cost rate (like 15%, as
announced in Policy Flash PF 2025-22). Rather, they cap the total
amount of indirect costs and fringe benefits that DOE will repay,
expressed as a percentage of the total award amount.
SUBCOMMITTEE RECESS
Senator Kennedy. And the subcommittee will now stand
adjourned.
[Whereupon, at 4:14 p.m., Wednesday, May 21, the
subcommittee was recessed, to reconvene subject to the call of
the Chair.]
ENERGY AND WATER DEVELOPMENT
APPROPRIATIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2026
----------
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 2025
U.S. Senate,
Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations,
Washington, DC.
The subcommittee met at 10:02 a.m., in room SD-124, Dirksen
Senate Office Building, Hon. John Kennedy (chairman) presiding.
Present: Senators Kennedy, Murkowski, Hyde-Smith, Britt,
Rounds, Murray, Merkley, and Peters.
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE--CIVIL
Department of the Army
Corps of Engineers--Civil
STATEMENT OF MR. D. LEE FORSGREN, ACTING ASSISTANT
SECRETARY OF THE ARMY (CIVIL WORKS)
OPENING STATEMENT OF SENATOR JOHN KENNEDY
Senator Kennedy. The Energy and Water Development
Subcommittee of the Appropriations Committee will come to
order. I want to thank all of our witnesses today. I think I'll
start by deferring to the vice-Chair of the Appropriations
Committee and the ranking member of this subcommittee, my
colleague, Senator Murray. She'd like to make some comments,
and then I'll have a few comments to make, and then we'll hear
from our witnesses.
STATEMENT OF SENATOR PATTY MURRAY
Senator Murray. All right. Thank you very much, Chair
Kennedy. Good morning to all of you, acting Assistant Secretary
Forsgren, Lieutenant General Graham, acting Assistant Secretary
Cameron. Thank you all for being here today.
We are here today to talk about the fiscal year 2026 budget
request for the Army Corps of Engineers and Bureau of
Reclamation. Whether they know it or not, every American
depends on the work of these agencies every day, and that's
especially true for folks in my home State of Washington, and
anyone who lives out West, or near a major waterway.
The Army Corps keeps our ports running smoothly, which is
critical for our economy and our trade. They manage critical
infrastructure like our dams, levees, and bridges, and protect
communities from dangerous floods. And they support our
ecosystems and help protect keystone species like salmon among
a lot else.
The Bureau of Reclamation brings water to over 30 million
people and irrigation to 1 in 5 farmers out West. It generates
power to keep the lights on in millions of homes, and it
protects farmers and communities against drought to name a few
things. It is critical work that we cannot afford to
shortchange, but President Trump's budget request shows yet
again that he has no clue and no problem gutting essential
water investments our communities rely on to feed their
families and stay safe from flooding.
The President's budget requests a nearly 25 percent cut for
the Corps of Engineers. And when you consider the fact that
House Republicans last yearlong CR (Continuing Resolution)
already cut funding for the Corps, we are really talking about
a nearly 30 percent cut for the Corps, relative to the funding
level just a few months ago.
This request, for example, falls $1.7 billion below the
target level for the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund, leaving
more than half of that target funding on the table. Not only
that, you include just $60 million for donor and energy ports
like my home State when our bipartisan Water Resources
Development Act has specifically instructed that there be $417
million for these ports. And President Trump's budget also
proposes a massive 30 percent cut for the Bureau of
Reclamation.
These cuts would end critical work on flood prevention,
port dredging, basic management of our water resources and
more. This is flat out dangerous, and Trump's budget is dead on
arrival here in Congress as far as I'm concerned. But we have a
lot more to cover beyond the budget request because as we sit
here today, the President seems bent on doing everything he can
to undermine the work of the Corps and the Bureau with reckless
staffing cuts, and by brazenly and corruptly politicizing the
allocation of funding and control over our Nation's water
resources.
In the span of just a few months, DOGE (Department of
Government Efficiency) has pushed out a quarter of the Bureau's
staff without any discernible strategy. This mass exodus of
talent puts the Bureau's mission at serious risk. The last
thing we need are fewer dam safety inspections or big delays on
repair projects.
And when it comes to politicization, the President spent
much of his first few weeks in office making up conspiracies
about California's water supply as wildfires raged, vowing to
block disaster relief, picking fights with the state's
governor, and against the advice of all experts, ultimately
ordered the Corps to open two dams and unleash billions of
gallons of water on California's central valley.
That move, predictably, did absolutely nothing to stop the
fires and came nowhere near LA (Los Angeles), but it did waste
huge quantities of precious water, and nearly flooded, yes,
flooded local farms and communities, and put agriculture at
risk. It was one of the first instances we saw of this
President meddling in the Corps's work and overruling experts
to chase some fixation.
But it was not the last. A few weeks ago, the Corps
released plans detailing how it is allocating funding for
construction projects in fiscal year 2025. Now, usually, that
is something we decide here in Congress, but that
decisionmaking power was turned over to Trump Administration
with the House Republicans yearlong slush fund CR. That was one
of the many reasons I voted against that bill, and it's a
reminder to all of us about why we do need strong bipartisan
spending bills.
So, instead of allocating construction funding to projects
that were selected in both our bipartisan Senate Appropriations
Bill and the Republican House Bill, and giving funding to red
and blue States roughly evenly, as both bills did, this
administration decided to steal hundreds of millions of dollars
million in critical investments from blue States and steer
those investments instead to red States and the President's
political allies.
Every single construction project in California, the most
populous State in the country was zeroed out. We're talking
about funds that protect people in one of the most flood-prone
States in the country gone, and Trump completely defunded
construction at the Howard Hanson Dam in Washington State,
leaving a literal hole in the ground. This is a shovel-ready
project that will ensure water reliability for over 1 million
people in the region. And of course, the administration budgets
proposal does not fund those projects in fiscal year 2026.
All told, two-thirds of the Army construction funding is
now headed to red States for no reason other than Trump wanting
to punish political enemies and reward friends. This is not how
these projects should work ever in the United States of
America.
Lieutenant General Graham, a few weeks ago, the assistant
secretary's office was asked in a house hearing about this
nakedly partisan allocation. That official didn't even try to
justify it. Instead, they said, tellingly, the buck stopped
with OMB (Office of Management and Budget). So, there it is,
Trump and Russell Vought called the shots and defended those
projects on their own.
Now, I shouldn't need to tell anyone here floods hit red
States and blue States alike. Droughts, hammer farmers in rural
districts and strain families in big ways. Every single
American in one way or another depends on our ports being well
maintained to get the basic goods we count on and keep our
economy humming. And everyone should be able to trust their
government will decide how to invest resources and protect them
from threats like flooding, drought, and wildfire based on
science, based on engineering. That is what's best for people,
not on a President's desire for retribution.
So, I believe Congress needs to reject these reckless cuts
that you are requesting for the Corps and the Bureau, and we
need to see an end to this egregious politicization of these
kinds of resources. This is not a path we can afford to
continue going down as a country.
So, I'll just give a warning to all of my colleagues. Once
again, it may not have been your State this time, but you all
know full well just how fickle the President can be. We should
not leave this authority with him. We do need to come together
and write our own strong bipartisan bill. Thank you.
Senator Kennedy. Put Senator Murray down as doubtful
gentlemen about your budget. I look at your budget a decrease
of 23 percent, it's $2 billion from fiscal year 2025 enacted. A
reduction in funding for the Mississippi River and tributaries
account of 29 percent. That's $106 million.
A reduction in funding for the operation and maintenance
account of 28 percent, $1.6 billion. The budget doesn't propose
any use, none, of the Inland Waterways Trust Fund receipts, and
proposes to use only $1.7 billion from the Harbor Maintenance
Trust Fund. That's about $1.7 billion less than the
Congressional target.
I was reading the other night, I don't remember the exact
figures, but scientists estimate that there are 2 to 3 trillion
galaxies in the universe. And in not a single one of those
galaxies is this Congress or any Congress likely to approve
this budget. I mean, that's just a fact.
Now, I understand the way it works, that you gentlemen
didn't write this budget. Hopefully, you had input, but you
didn't write it. It came from OMB. And I also understand that
Congress has never accepted a President's budget, any
President's budget, and just enacted it without changes. That's
never happened in the history of ever. So, I get all that.
But having said that this is obviously not acceptable, and
I hope we can talk about that frankly today. I don't know
what's going to happen this year in terms of a budget. I'm an
optimist, but I am a paranoid optimist. Last year, I watched
Senator Murray and Senator Collins work really, really hard to
put together 12 bills. I watched the entire Appropriations
Committee work very, very hard to approve those bills.
And a lot of us had to, on both sides of the aisle, had to
swallow things that we almost choked on, but we wanted to put
together a budget because that's our first job. I know you hear
a lot about the Senate being in the personnel business, and we
are, but really, our job's put together a budget. And we did.
And my friend Senator Schumer refused to bring any of those
bills to the floor. Not one, none, zero.
My goal was to see the bills come to the floor and then
have an open amendment process where colleagues of mine both on
and off the Appropriations Committee could weigh in. But
Senator Schumer chose not to. I mean, that's just a fact.
I don't know what's going to happen this year under
President Trump. I want to try to be as impartial as I can be
in making this statement, but I think it's accurate. Under
President Biden, and President set the tone in Washington,
under President Biden, the general discussion was who needs to
pay more in taxes?
Under President Trump, it's clear to me at this juncture
that the discussion has changed. The discussion is now what the
hell happened to the money? And that's a healthy discussion to
have. But when it comes to the Corps of Engineers--and before I
get there, and that leads me to believe that we may not have a
budget this year. I just don't know if we can come together on
it. It's always a challenge.
But it's clear to me that at least on my side of the aisle
we are expecting to reduce the amount of spending,
strategically, but reduce it. And I know some of my friends in
the Senate are going to have a problem with that, but that's
the reality.
Now, when it comes to the Corps of Engineers, that is
slightly different because there is bipartisan support for the
important work that you do. It doesn't mean that we can't find
savings, and it doesn't mean that we shouldn't make changes.
And we're going to talk about that today, but a 23 percent
decrease, I think some to Murray by her calculations, it might
be a 30 percent. That's just not acceptable. So, help us, help
us work through this and come up with a plan that looks like
somebody designed it on purpose, which is not this one.
Let me make one other comment and then, then I want to hear
from you gentlemen. Look, I know you have a tough job. I get
that. Every Senator, every congress person wants their
projects, and they want them first, and they want them
yesterday. I get that. And you have finite resources. We all
do. And you have a lot of smart people working at your agency,
but you could use more. I get all that.
So, I don't want to--I'm spending a few minutes on this
because I appreciate the job that you do. I do. But we've got
to do better. Our estimates on the cost of projects are just
too wide off the mark. I mean, I could give you, I'm not going
to do it, but I could give you example, after example, after
example. And we're not talking 10 percent off, or 20 percent
off, or 30 percent off, we're talking squillions of dollars
off. I understand inflation, but it doesn't account for this.
We also have to figure out a way you do--frankly, to bring
these projects in on time or at least closer to the estimated
time. If you did in the private sector in terms of your delays
in your, I'll say higher, our cost overruns, if you did that in
the private sector, you would be out of business. Nobody would
hire you, and the penalties from not completing the project on
time would put you out of business. We just got to do better.
It's just that simple. And I hope you, today, you'll talk about
how you're planning on doing that.
Let's start with us today. I guess I should introduce our
colleagues who are here today. Acting Secretary Lee Forsgren,
he was appointed principal deputy Assistant Secretary of the
Army Civil Works on March 31. Welcome. Lieutenant General
Williams H. Butch Graham, Jr. You are the 56th Chief of
Engineers and Commanding General of the United States Army
Corps of Engineers. You assumed your duties on September 13,
2024. Welcome. Acting Assistant Secretary for Water and
Science, Scott Cameron. Secretary Cameron has been in this role
since January 21. We welcome all of you. The floor is yours.
Why don't we start with Secretary Forsgren.
SUMMARY STATEMENT OF MR. D. LEE FORSGREN
Mr. Forsgren. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member
Murray, other members of the subcommittee. It's an honor to be
here this morning. Before I go too deep, I wanted to point out
that on Saturday, the Army turns 250, and the Army Corps of
Engineers turns 250 on Monday. So, this--the Corps of Engineers
and the Civil Works Program have been around since the dawn of
the country, and I could not be prouder to be working with the
professionals that to every day take that legacy forward.
I would like to ask that my entire statement be placed in
the record. But a couple of just points, Mr. Chairman. We
couldn't agree with you more that we need to find ways to bring
projects in, on time, and as much as closer to being on-budget.
There is a myriad of reasons for that.
But pointing fingers isn't going to solve the problem. We
are committed to trying to do that there. There's probably not
a single silver bullet that would've fixed that problem, or it
would've been fixed decades ago. So, we've got to find a bunch
of a number of ways to work the problem, to make our projects
be more cost effective and faster.
That said, General Graham works every day on that process.
We are committed, as Secretary of the Army's Office and in the
administration, to support those functions in all of our
interest, and it's in the national interest to do so.
And with that, I would just welcome any questions that you-
all might have.
[The statement follows:]
Prepared Statement of Mr. D. Lee Forsgren
Chairman Kennedy, Ranking Member Murray, and distinguished members
of the subcommittee, thank you for the opportunity to be here today to
discuss the President's Fiscal Year 2026 Budget for the Army Civil
Works program.
The Fiscal Year 2026 Budget includes nearly $6.7 billion for the
Army Civil Works program, with a focus on the Corps' primary missions
of commercial navigation, flood and storm damage reduction, and aquatic
ecosystem restoration. The Budget focuses on opportunities to support
these missions that provide a high return to the American public, such
as by facilitating maritime commerce, addressing the most significant
flood risks facing communities, and restoring the highest priority
aquatic ecosystems.
In total, the FY 2026 Construction program is funded at more than
$1.6 billion. The majority of that amount is provided in the
Construction account, but also $43 million from the Harbor Maintenance
Trust Fund, and $55 million from the Mississippi River and Tributaries
account. The Construction program uses objective, performance-based
criteria to give priority to the projects with the highest economic,
environmental, and safety returns.
The President's Fiscal Year 2026 Budget focuses on commercial
navigation, which is a key pillar in our nation's economic strength. In
support of our nation's manufacturing supply chain and the
Administration's commitment to our nation's coastal ports and inland
waterways, the Fiscal Year 2026 Budget includes $379 million in
construction funding including $161.591 million for the Houston Ship
Channel, Texas project and $176.6 million to continue construction of
the Sault Ste Marie (Replacement Lock), Michigan project to provide
efficiency and redundancy for a critical trade route for iron ore in
the Great Lakes region. Also included in the Budget is $1.1 billion to
operate and maintain the top 50 U.S. coastal ports, which handle around
90 percent of the nation's waterborne cargo that is shipped to or from
the United States in foreign commerce.
Flood and storm damage reduction is at the center of the Civil
Works program's actions to support the Administration's goal of
addressing the most significant flood risks facing communities.
Accordingly, the Budget contains over $1.7 billion for flood and storm
damage reduction. Of this amount, the Budget includes $571 million in
funding to address dam safety at the Whittier Narrows, CA project.
The Budget includes $650 million for the aquatic ecosystem
restoration mission. The Budget supports the high-priority
environmental restoration priorities of the Administration with the
inclusion of $446 million for the South Florida Ecosystem Restoration
program, which will enable significant progress to continue in
restoring America's Everglades.
Of course, in addition to construction projects, the Budget focuses
on maintaining the key features of the vast water resources
infrastructure that the Corps owns and manages. Specifically, the FY
2026 Budget funds the Operation and Maintenance program at over $4.1
billion, consisting of just over $2.3 billion from the Operation and
Maintenance account, nearly $1.7 billion from the Harbor Maintenance
Trust Fund, and nearly $192 million from the Mississippi River and
Tributaries account. For Operation and Maintenance, the Budget
prioritizes the maintenance of commercial navigation on Federal
channels over spending on projects that are not a Federal
responsibility.The allocation of funding among projects for maintenance
reflects a risk-informed approach that considers both project and
project component conditions and the potential consequences of a
failure. The Budget also gives priority to the maintenance of coastal
ports and inland waterways with the highest commercial traffic.
As I wrap up, I'll note the FY 2026 Budget provides $139 million
for the Investigations program, consisting of $130 million from the
Investigations account and $9 million from the Mississippi River and
Tributaries account. This includes preconstruction engineering and
design work for dam safety modification projects with high risk of
failure, including $18.5 million for Garrison Dam, Lake Sakakawea,
North Dakota and $26 million for Keystone Lake, Oklahoma.
Additionally, the FY 2026 Regulatory Program is funded at $221
million to provide efficiency in permit processing.
Lastly, I would like to note that $7 million is included for the
Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works. Since
2009, my office has never received an appropriation larger than $5
million, and some years less. However, our costs--salaries and
retirement, services and rent, and travel and supplies--have all
continued to rise over the past 15 years. Using the latest U.S.
government Consumer Price Index data (at a 44.6% cumulative rate of
inflation), the $5 million my office received in 2009 equates to over
$7 million in today's dollars. However, this funding has remained flat.
Full funding is critical to provide effective oversight of the Army
Civil Works program.
To summarize, the Budget makes critical investments in water
resources that will benefit the American people and promote greater
prosperity and economic growth for decades to come.
I am very honored to implement the President's priorities for the
Army Civil Works program and excited to be a part of a great team--
serving our Nation.
Thank you for inviting me here today. I look forward to your
questions.
Senator Kennedy. Lieutenant General Graham, welcome.
STATEMENT OF LIEUTENANT GENERAL WILLIAM H. GRAHAM, JR.,
CHIEF OF ENGINEERS AND COMMANDING GENERAL,
U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS
General Graham. Thanks. Chairman Kennedy, Ranking Member
Murray, I'm honored to testify before you today in regard to
the President's fiscal year 2026 budget. The United States Army
Corps of Engineers, as we've heard this morning, the course of
works program is absolutely key to the Nation's commercial
navigation, flood and storm damage reduction, and aquatic
ecosystem restoration missions, amongst others.
To highlight a couple of those, the navigation program
underpins the entire national economy ensuring that commodities
can move reliably and efficiently. Our flood and storm damage
reduction program maintains over 746 dams, and over 13,000
miles of Federal levees that protect over $200 billion in flood
damages avoided, averaged over a 10-year period.
The 2026 President's budget is performance-based and
focused on high performing projects and programs, and the Corps
uses a targeted approach to invest in the water resources that
benefit the Nation now and into the future.
Chairman, we absolutely take you seriously on we've got to
improve delivery. Our objective every day is to safely deliver
quality projects on schedule and within budget. That's our
objective. It's not a goal, it's our objective. To this end,
we've improved our ability to measure our on-schedule
performance. And right now, when I checked this morning, we're
at 81 percent. That's a low, low, low B, and that's
unacceptable.
This performance, as you've discussed, is influenced by
factors that we can't control, such as inflation. But there's a
bunch that we can control, and I'd like to highlight three, and
then we're organizing the Corps around these three.
First and foremost, we've got to get the engineering right,
and we've got to get the engineering right before we ask for
authorization. It's like coming up to the authorizing
committees and say, ``I need a house,'' and I put a price tag
on it, but I didn't tell I need a four-bedroom house with a
two-car garage.
We've asked for authority to build things where we haven't
had the scope nailed down fully. And in engineering terms, the
design needs to be matured at least to the 35 percent design
before we ask for the authority to build it. And that's my
commitment to you. I'll sign no chief's report unless the
engineering is advanced to the 35 percent design.
Second thing we need to do is we've got to get the project
management right. And Chairman, that's what you said. We've got
to make good schedules that have contingency to deal with the
unknowns. And then, we've got to stick to those schedules with
a great sense of urgency.
And the last one, we've got to get the team that's building
this right. And we're striving every day to bring in the right
team members or the right contractors to augment our team to
build these facilities. So, the path to successful deliveries
is clear; plan projects thoroughly, build them rapidly with
predictable funding, and have the right team of master
craftsmen to deliver them. And I look forward to working with
this committee to stay on that path.
And I look forward to your questions.
[The statement follows:]
Prepared Statement of Lieutenant General William H. ``Butch'' Graham,
Jr.
Chairman Kennedy, Ranking Member Murray, and Members of the
Subcommittee:
I am honored to testify before your committee today, along with Mr.
D. Lee Forsgren, the Acting Assistant Secretary of the Army (Civil
Works), in regard to the President's Fiscal Year 2026 (FY 2026)
discretionary Budget request (discretionary request) for the Army Civil
Works Program.
Through the Civil Works Program, the United States Army Corps of
Engineers (Corps) works with other Federal agencies, and with state,
Tribal, and local agencies and others, to develop, manage, restore, and
protect water resources, primarily through the construction, operation
and maintenance, and study of water-related infrastructure projects.
The Corps focuses on work that provides high economic, environmental,
and public safety returns to the Nation. The Corps also regulates
development in waters of the United States and works with other Federal
agencies to help communities respond to, and recover from, floods and
other natural disasters.
summary of fy 2026 discretionary request
The Civil Works Program is performance-based and focuses on high-
performing projects and programs within the three main water resources
missions of the Corps: commercial navigation, flood and storm damage
reduction, and aquatic ecosystem restoration. The Corps uses a targeted
approach to invest in water resources, which will benefit the Nation
now and in the future.
The discretionary request includes nearly $6.7 billion for the
Civil Works Program.
investigations program
The Investigations program is funded both in the Investigations
account and in the Mississippi River and Tributaries account. The Corps
uses these funds to evaluate water resources problems and opportunities
within the Corps' three main mission areas, design proposed projects,
and support related work. The Investigations program includes the Corps
planning assistance and technical assistance programs, where the Corps
shares its expertise with local communities to help them identify and
understand their water resources challenges, and to develop options,
with an emphasis on steps that they can take on their own to address
these issues. For FY 2026, the Budget includes a total of $139 million
for the Investigations program.
construction program
The Construction program is funded through the Construction
account, the Mississippi River and Tributaries (MR&T) account, and the
Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund (HMTF) account.
The goal of the Construction program is to produce as much value as
possible for the Nation from the available funds. The Corps also gives
priority to investments, selected on a risk-informed basis, in dam
safety assurance, seepage control, and static instability correction
work at dams that the Corps owns and operates. The FY 2026 Budget
includes a total of $1.656 billion for the Construction program to
support these high- priority investments.
operation and maintenance (o&m) program
The O&M program of the Corps is funded through the O&M account, the
MR&T account, and the HMTF account.
Generally, the O&M program supports completed works owned or
operated by the Corps, including operation and maintenance of locks and
dams along the inland waterways; maintenance dredging of inland and
coastal Federal channels; operation and maintenance of multi-purpose
dams and reservoirs for flood risk reduction and related purposes such
as hydropower; and management of Corps facilities and lands, including
serving as a responsible steward of the natural resources on those
lands.
The FY 2026 Budget includes a total of $4.174 billion for the
Operation and Maintenance program to support the Corps' efforts to
sustain the benefits of its existing infrastructure.
All structures age and can deteriorate over time, causing a
potential decline in reliability. The Corps has a large portfolio of
water resources projects and is working to sustain the benefits that
the key features of its infrastructure provide.
The Corps continues to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of
its Operation and Maintenance program. The Corps does so by targeting
its investments in infrastructure maintenance, repair, and
rehabilitation on a risk-informed basis. It invests in the highest
priority needs with emphasis on the key features of the infrastructure
that the Corps owns and operates, and in work that will reduce long-
term O&M costs in real terms.
regulatory program
Through its Regulatory Program, the Corps protects the Nation's
waters including wetlands, and regulates development that could impede
navigation, while allowing reasonable development to proceed. The FY
2026 request includes $221 million to support this important permitting
and compliance work.
formerly utilized sites remedial action program (fusrap)
Through FUSRAP, the Corps is involved in the investigation and
cleanup of certain low- level radioactive materials and mixed wastes,
located mostly at sites contaminated as a result of the Nation's early
atomic weapons development program. The FY 2026 Budget includes $200
million to continue this remediation work.
conclusion
The FY 2026 discretionary Budget request for the Army Civil Works
Program represents a continuing, fiscally prudent investment in the
Nation's water resources infrastructure. The U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers is committed to a performance-based Civil Works Program,
based on innovative, high-return, risk-informed solutions.
Thank you, Chairman Kennedy, Ranking Member Murray, and Members of
the Subcommittee. This concludes my statement. I look forward to
answering any questions you or other Members of the Subcommittee may
have.
Senator Kennedy. Thank you, General. Mr. Secretary.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Reclamation
STATEMENT OF MR. SCOTT J. CAMERON, ACTING ASSISTANT
SECRETARY FOR WATER AND SCIENCE
Mr. Cameron. Thank you, Chairman Kennedy, Ranking Member
Murray, and Senator Hyde-Smith for the opportunity to testify
to you today on behalf of the President's 2026 budget request
for the Bureau of Reclamation.
Reclamation's projects and programs serve as the water and
power infrastructure backbone of the American West constituting
an important driver of economic growth in hundreds of basins
throughout the 17 Western States. Reclamation manages water for
agriculture, hydropower production, municipal and industrial
use, and provides flood control and recreation for 90 million
people.
Recreation's activities support economic activity valued at
$64 billion, and support approximately half a million jobs.
Reclamation delivers 10 trillion gallons of water to millions
of people each year and provides water for irrigation of 10
million acres of farmland, which yields approximately 25
percent of our Nation's fruit and nut crops, and 60 percent of
the vegetable harvest.
Water and related resources account ensures reliable water
and energy for agriculture, industry, cities, and rural
populations, foundational pillars of the President's America
first agenda. These investments deliver tangible results
aligned with executive orders, promoting energy dominance, and
streamlined governance.
The Central Valley Project in California maintains and
modernizes facilities and increases water conveyance to
Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley. The Klamath
Project in Oregon and California ensures operational
flexibility for irrigation deliveries and natural resource
management.
The Bureau of Reclamation's work on the Colorado River
directly advances presidential priorities of securing American
energy, ensuring domestic water supply, and asserting
sovereignty and international negotiations with Mexico through
the lower Colorado River Operations Program, including
implementation of the drought contingency plans, and binational
agreements with Mexico. Reclamation enhances water supply
reliability for U.S. communities while acknowledging our treaty
obligations.
We're working very closely with the seven Colorado River
Basin States at this point because a number of key agreements
expire in 2026, and we are working very hard to find a seven-
State solution that the seven governors will find agreeable to
manage the increasingly scarce water resources over the
Colorado Basin for the next 20 years.
Thank you for your time. I look forward to answering your
questions.
[The statement follows:]
Prepared Statement of Scott J. Cameron
Thank you, Chairman Kennedy, Ranking Member Murray, and members of
the Subcommittee for the opportunity to testify in support of President
Trump's Fiscal Year 2026 budget blueprint request for the Bureau of
Reclamation and discuss what our team is doing to make America safer,
stronger, and more prosperous. I am Scott Cameron, Senior Advisor to
the Secretary, Exercising Delegated Authority of the Assistant
Secretary.
Reclamation's projects and programs serve as the water and power
infrastructure backbone of the American West, constituting an important
driver of economic growth in hundreds of basins throughout the 17
Western States. Reclamation manages water for agriculture, hydropower
production, municipal and industrial use, and provides flood control
and recreation for 90 million people. Reclamation's activities support
economic activity valued at $64 billion and support approximately
450,700 jobs. Reclamation delivers 10 trillion gallons of water to
millions of people each year and provides water for irrigation of 10
million acres of farmland, which yields approximately 25 percent of the
Nation's fruit and nut crops, and 60 percent of the vegetable harvest.
Reclamation serves 17 Western States: Arizona, California,
Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North
Dakota, Oregon, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington, and
Wyoming. Reclamation works with a wide range of stakeholders, including
water and power customers, Tribes, State and local officials, non-
governmental organizations and others.
The Bureau of Reclamation's FY 2026 budget blueprint of $1.2
billion focuses on the core mission of maintaining assets that provide
safe, reliable and efficient management of water resources through the
western United States.
water & related resources overview
The Bureau of Reclamation's Water & Related Resources (W&RR)
account is the primary source for carrying out its mission to manage,
develop, and protect water and related resources in the western United
States. This account supports the planning, construction, operation,
maintenance, and rehabilitation of Reclamation projects that deliver
water for agricultural, municipal, and industrial use; generate
hydroelectric power; and support environmental stewardship and
recreation. It also supports programs that promote water conservation,
improve infrastructure reliability, and ensure compliance with
applicable environmental laws.
Within the W&RR account, appropriations are organized into several
functional categories. Water and Energy Management and Development
supports projects and programs that enhance water supply reliability,
and water infrastructure development. Land Management and Development
covers the stewardship of Federal lands associated with Reclamation
projects, including recreation, cultural resources, and public safety.
Fish and Wildlife Management and Development supports species and
habitat protection, ensuring compliance with the Endangered Species Act
and other environmental statutes. Facility Operations ensures that
Reclamation's dams, canals, and powerplants operate safely and
efficiently to meet delivery and power generation commitments. Facility
Maintenance and Rehabilitation addresses aging infrastructure,
conducting major repairs, and modernizing facilities to maintain system
reliability and performance. This account also funds the ongoing
operational and maintenance needs of completed Indian Water Rights
projects as well as work to help meet statutory compliance of enacted
settlements. Together, these categories ensure the Bureau can meet its
core mission while addressing long-term sustainability and risk
management.
The W&RR account ensures reliable water and energy for agriculture,
industry, and rural populations--foundational pillars of the
President's ``America First'' agenda. These investments deliver
tangible results aligned with Executive Orders promoting energy
dominance and streamlined governance.
prioritizing western water deliveries for people and agriculture
On January 20, 2025, President Trump issued a memorandum titled
``Putting People over Fish: Stopping Radical Environmentalism to
Provide Water to Southern California.'' This directive instructs
Reclamation to ``route more water from the Sacramento--San Joaquin
Delta to other parts of California'' to benefit farms and communities.
Reclamation is taking action now to support the President's initiatives
by:
Focusing on California Water Supply: The Central Valley Projects
(CVP) includes multiple divisions, including the American River
Division, Delta, and the Trinity River division. These projects
maintain and modernize facilities and increase water conveyance to
Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley.
Emphasis on Water Deliveries for People & Agriculture: The Klamath
Project ensures operational flexibility for irrigation deliveries.
Streamlining Regulatory Hurdles: Supporting ESA compliance and
legal coordination to invoke emergency exemptions.
colorado river water
The Bureau of Reclamation's work on the Colorado River directly
advances presidential priorities of securing American energy,
maximizing domestic water supply, and asserting sovereignty in
international negotiations. Through the Lower Colorado River Operations
Program, including implementation of Drought Contingency Plans and bi-
national agreements with Mexico under Minute 323, Reclamation enhances
water reliability for U.S. communities while maintaining strategic
control of cross-border resources. Simultaneously, operation of Glen
Canyon Dam and Lake Powell, along with the Upper Colorado River
Operations Program, reinforces national energy production through
stable hydropower generation, and ensures water delivery certainty
across the Southwest, fulfilling directives to prioritize
infrastructure, reduce regulatory interference, and deliver for
farmers, families, and industry.
central utah project completion act
The Budget supports continuing construction of the Utah Lake
Drainage Basin Water Delivery System, the final component of the
Central Utah Project; allows for development and implementation of
water conservation projects to extend limited water supplies; and
provides support for associated fish and wildlife conservation
measures.
Senator Kennedy. Thank you, Mr. Secretary.
I'm going to listen for a while. My guess is Senator Murray
has some questions.
Senator Murray. I do.
Senator Kennedy. The floor is yours, Madam vice-Chair.
Senator Murray. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Thank
you for your testimony this morning.
General Graham, let me start with you. The Howard Hanson
Dam project is to address dam safety issues, provide additional
water supply and meet the court's legal obligations by opening
up miles of critical salmon habitat. Would you agree with that
assessment
General Graham. Ranking Member Murray, yes. The Howard
Hanson project right now is the one we're working on, is
primarily a fish passage to figure out how to get small
juvenile fish off of a high head dam, which we've never done
before. But it's part of a larger project that provides, as you
said, critical flood risk management and water supply
protection to the southeastern part of Seattle.
Senator Murray. Is it true that the $500 million the
project was slated to receive in the fiscal year 2025 budget as
well as in the House and Senate bills would've allowed
construction to proceed on schedule?
General Graham. Yes, that would've allowed us to keep on
our current construction schedule.
Senator Murray. Yes. Well, it's clear that Howard Hanson
Dam project is shovel ready. And despite that, the Trump
Administration seems ready to walk away from that. Everyone
needs to understand turning the Army Corps into a political
slush fund sets a very dangerous precedent. In fact, in
testimony before the House, a top Army Corps official very
explicitly stated that OMB, not the experts at the Corps,
called the final shots here.
Section 107 has been passed on a bipartisan basis in our
bill for the last 5 years and makes clear that funding should
be allocated only to projects determined to be eligible by the
chief of engineers. It appears that OMB handed the Corps the
final spend plan without consulting you as required. The law
needs to be followed.
So, I'm going to ask you yes or no. Were you provided a
final spend plan so you could determine all the project listed
were eligible?
General Graham. Ranking Member Murray, we provided our best
technical recommendation to the assistant secretary.
Mr. Forsgren. And Senator Murray, we provided input through
the presidential budget process on that spending plan.
Senator Murray. You provided----
General Graham. We provided technical input on that
spending plan.
Senator Murray. So, that you could prove that all of them
were eligible. Correct?
General Graham. I don't think eligibility was ever the
question.
Senator Murray. Well, that's really troubling and really an
example of this administration that just somehow thinks they're
above the law. I mean, I got news for Russell Vought; the law
applies to him the same as for everybody else. So, that is very
troubling.
Mr. Forsgren, let me go back to you. I consistently hear
from ports and harbors across the country about how they rely
on the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund to maintain critical port
infrastructure.
Now, in April, the administration issued an executive order
acknowledging that cargo carriers divert goods to Canada from
our donor ports, Seattle-Tacoma, others, to avoid the harbor
maintenance tax. That's really an unfair practice. I've spoken
about it for years, but this year's budget request does not
even attempt to meet the word of targets for HMTF (Harbor
Maintenance Trust Fund) donor port funding. And even more
troubling in the skinny budget.
This administration tries to tell Congress that it is not a
Federal responsibility to provide those dollars, even though
that is one of the explicit purposes Congress passed into law.
That is really unacceptable. Donor port funding has already
been determined through the water process and our annual
appropriations bills for years. It is extremely frustrating
that I have to continue raising this issue year after year to
get our ports the fair share they are entitled to under the
law.
Will you commit to ensure that donor ports like Seattle and
Tacoma will receive their full fair share of the HMTF dollars
as Congress intended?
Mr. Forsgren. Senator, I will commit to working to ensure
that the Harbor Maintenance Fund is used to the maximum extent
it possibly can. We understand the Harbor Maintenance Fund is
the backbone of the commercial navigation----
Senator Murray. Yes.
Mr. Forsgren [continuing]. System for our ports, and that
system has to be able to be functional across all the Nation's
ports. But I will say there needs to be a primary focus on the
principal Federal responsibility, which is the mainline
channels. But I do will commit to working with you to fully
utilize the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund as it is passed into
law.
Senator Murray. Okay. Well, let me ask you one more
question in my last few seconds. The Columbia River provides
habitat for salmon, endangered species. It also irrigates
600,000 acres of farmland and serves as a marine highway. It
also provides electricity to the entire northwest, and
critically, it has a transboundary waterway shared with Canada.
So, the State Department has been leading efforts to negotiate
a modernized Columbia River Treaty, which is really critical to
providing certainty for people and businesses across our region
who rely on the Columbia River.
But this administration appears committed to doing
everything they can now to tank our relationship with our
friend and neighbor, Canada. And the key to getting this
agreement in place and all the hard work that has gone into it
was collaboration between all the stakeholders. It is really
imperative that as the interim agreement is executed, that that
collaboration continues.
So, Mr. Cameron, Mr. Forsgren, will you commit to ensuring
that the Corps and Reclamation continue to communicate with
Tribes and the public utilities on the operation of the
Columbia River System?
Mr. Forsgren. Senator Murray, we certainly commit. We are
committed to the treaty, as is reflected in the budget, and we
are committed to continuing the dialogue necessary to operate
and maintain the system.
Senator Murray. Mr. Cameron.
Mr. Cameron. Yes, Senator. I've already had multiple
meetings with stakeholders from throughout the Columbia River
Basin, so we're including Tribes. So, you know, conversations
are ongoing.
Senator Murray. Okay. This is really a critical treaty. We
need to get it enacted. And again, Canada is not our enemy
there. We need to conclude them. Thank you.
Senator Kennedy. Senator Hyde-Smith.
Senator Hyde-Smith. Thank you, Chairman Kennedy. And thank
you, panel, for being here today. I certainly appreciate your
willingness to serve in the capacities that you do.
My first question is going to be on the Yazoo Backwater
Area Management Project, which is no surprise to anyone. I've
been working on this for many, many years. And Secretary
Forsgren and General Graham, as you know, the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers, Mississippi Valley Division, signed a record of
decision for the new Yazoo Backwater Area Management Plan
earlier this year, which I, with thousands of Mississippi, were
thrilled about this milestone. And I'd also like to express my
gratitude to the Corps for the $32 million allocated to the
project in your fiscal year 2025 work plan that was announced
last month.
Of those funds, $15 million we used for pre-construction
engineering and design work, $15 million for mitigation to
protect wildlife and wildlife habitat, and $2 million for
mitigation infrastructure construction. We're certainly moving
in the right direction now and providing adequate flood
protection for area residents. Something that was promised
literally decades ago.
The findings outlined in the project's final environmental
impact statement stated in addition to reducing catastrophic
flooding that project implementation would not convert any
wetlands to wetlands. Wildlife and habitat will be better off
for the project, aquatic resources will be better off with this
project, water quality will be better off for this project,
everything is positive here. Everything will be better off.
Secretary for Forsgren and General Graham, would you agree
with the findings detailed in the final EIS (Environmental
Impact Statement)?
Mr. Forsgren. Yes, Senator. We are committed to that
project. We were--I will say, put my personal hat on, I sat in
your office about 5 years ago when we discussed the outlines of
the beginnings of that project and how we might move forward.
And I was thrilled to see that it, you know, is moving forward.
So, when I was sworn in, I was happy, to be honest, not to have
to take up--that the project had moved forward in that interim
period.
The short answer is there's going--we're committed to the
project. We're committed to moving forward. I believe the
findings are accurate. That doesn't mean the Corps still has a
lot to do for as the engineering and how we finalize exactly
what that project needs to look like. But we're talking about
deciding on the--which crown molding we're going to take, put
in the house. We're not deciding on to build the house in this
case.
General Graham. I don't have much to add. We're thrilled,
and we're excited to see this moving forward. Our commitment to
you is as we go into pre-construction engineering and design,
is let's advance that design now to include the mitigation
that--you know, the extent of that, so that when we come
forward, this is how much this is going to cost, that we give
you an accurate cost estimate. That's our commitment to you.
Senator Hyde-Smith. Wonderful. And the total capability for
this project for the fiscal year 2026 is truly significant. I
get that. I'm shocked by that, nor does it scare me away
because it's something we have to do. Should Congress provide
robust funding for the Yazoo Backwater Area Management Project
in this year's appropriations process, how confident are you
that the Corps will be able to put that to good use?
Mr. Forsgren. Senator, you raise a very pertinent issue in
the context of the Yazoo Project. That's true across that. And
that is how to--the Corps's capabilities set against their
capabilities on any given project versus the totality of the
project. And you really can't take the capabilities for a
project without looking at the totality of the region, of the
district, and of the Nation in total.
So, with that said, I will defer to General Graham to talk
specifically, but I think we're still trying to figure out how
our capabilities match against the resources.
General Graham. And Senator, that's it, with the work plan
funding, with the engineering pre-construction work we're doing
right now. I don't really know what our capability is.
Concretely, for 2026, we owe you that. And our commitment to
you is to work with you and your office as the months progress
and share what we do know with you on the efficacy of our
current cost estimate.
Senator Hyde-Smith. Great. Well, I certainly want us all to
get to yes, and I'm willing to help us get there, whatever it
takes. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Senator Kenndey. Senator Britt.
Senator Britt. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you all for appearing before this committee today. I
want to start by telling you how much I appreciate your
attention and that of Deputy Assistant Secretary Stacy Brown to
the needs of Alabama's inland waterway system. Thank you for
getting on the phone with me. Thank you for helping us work
through this.
As you all know, we had catastrophic failures this year,
whether it be at Demopolis, whether it be in Holt, whether it
be in Wilson. When these things happen, it disrupts entire
economies. I mean, we saw it negatively impact our Ag industry,
negatively impact our energy industry, negatively impact our
aerospace industry. So, I am very grateful for your attention
to those matters and helping us get them back up and moving.
That being said, I'm also pleased to see that the work plan
budgeted for repairs in Demopolis and Holt and also appreciate
what you're doing in Coffeeville as well. I think it is
imperative that we actually fix these things before they become
a problem. And so, that's my question to you. How do we get to
the place where we are doing the type of maintenance that is
needed to prevent these failures, on time, on budget, but ahead
of when they actually occur?
And so, Mr. Forsgren, let's start with you. I know there is
a substantial O&M (Operations and Maintenance) backlog. I know
when you are looking at all of the different needs across the
Nation, how do we make sure that we're appropriately taking
care of our inland waterway system and not playing catch up,
but doing these things on the front end?
Mr. Forsgren. Senator, the Corps basically does all of its
O&M budgeting and proposals against the engineering and risk
assessed. You know, for risk of--well, I'm meaning risk of
failure, and we prioritize those things with the highest risk
of failure. Could there always be more resources in O&M?
Absolutely. But we all live in a constrained environment, but
the Corps does very, in fact, they do a very good job of
assessing the damage, assessing the potential risks associated
with failure when they look at O&M. Have we been absolutely
perfect with that? No. But----
Senator Britt. Is it an issue of funding? Is it an issue of
front loading that so that you have that, or is it an issue of
manpower? Like, what gets us to these points?
Mr. Forsgren. I think it's principally an issue of--funding
is too easy a way to say that. You know, it's easy. If we had
more money and more people, of course we could do better.
Senator Britt. Absolutely.
Mr. Forsgren. But I think it's more of a case of what can--
how do we really focus what we're doing with the resources we
do have.
Senator Britt. Well, let's continue this conversation. I
have limited time here, but I want us to actually dig down on
this. There is no reason for us to get to the point of failure.
We should be taking a look and making responsible upgrades and
maintenance on the front end so that we don't get to this
point. So, I want to talk to y'all about that in a real way----
Mr. Forsgren. Absolutely.
Senator Britt [continuing]. So that we can have a tangible
pathway forward. I want to talk about a project that I think
has worked well, and Lieutenant General Graham, I'd like to ask
you about the Mobile Harbor Deepening Project. Look, we've
taken it down to 50 feet. It's going to be the deepest deep-
water port there, right there in the Gulf. This is a project
that has been on time and under budget. Talk to me about how
you achieved that.
General Graham. Oh, in the few minutes we have left, on
Black Warrior, we are now providing a reliable transportation
system that your constituents can count on. We own that. I
stood down at the sill----
Senator Britt. Thank you.
General Graham [continuing]. Theopolis, and I had all of
our smart engineers from around the Nation there, and we were
trying to figure out how could we have seen that that still
might be great.
Senator Britt. I appreciate you taking ownership of that.
Thank you.
General Graham. We absolutely own that. They got really
inventive up at Holt so that we can get that back in operation
with the temporary fix. And then, we have the long-term fix. We
absolutely are not providing a reliable system, and that's our
commitment to do that.
Senator Britt. I really appreciate that. Thank you so much.
General Graham. On Mobile Harbor, this is going to be a
great year on the deepening. The key to success, stable,
predictable funding.
Senator Britt. Stable predictable funding. I only have a
few minutes left, so let me talk about something there. In the
word of bill this year, order 2024, I included a provision in
there that said no less than 70 percent of suitable dredge
material would be used for beneficial use. This is critically
important. We can do two things. We can make sure that we have
the economic engine that is the Port of Mobile, and we
responsibly preserve our natural resources.
It's imperative. This dredge material could be used for
habitat restoration, for beach nourishment, for wetland
creation. And I am not going to move off of that. So, we have
to make sure that we are good stewards of the natural resources
that the good Lord has given us. And we can do both of these
things at the same time.
I am out of time, but listen, it is not acceptable that we
have delays in this. I want to make sure that we figure out a
pathway to get these answers quickly, and that we can speed up
the process. It is imperative that we do so, both on the
permitting side, and taking a look at some of these
overburdensome reviews.
So, I know that I am out of time, but do you have just a
comment on how we can do that? Quickly----
Mr. Forsgren. Short answer is----
Senator Britt [continuing]. The chairman's being gracious
to me.
Mr. Forsgren. Senator, we are committed to beneficial use
of dredge materials as the--probably the preferred method to
dispose----
Senator Britt. Good
Mr. Forsgren [continuing]. Of our dredging material. And we
are committed both on the permitting side and on the project
design side to maximize the use of beneficially used materials.
Senator Britt. Okay. Let's--go ahead.
General Graham. Senator, what we're doing down at Dolphin
Island is----
Senator Britt. Yes, sir.
General Graham [continuing]. I think exemplary.
Senator Britt. Yes sir.
General Graham. What Mobile's district doing with a
programmatic agreement so that we can get that all up front on
the permitting, and that is we treat the clean sand, clean silt
as a resource for the environment and for--in terms of the
beach protection as well, so.
Senator Britt. Absolutely. Okay, well, let's work together.
I am absolutely not going to back off of this and believe that
we can do both things.
And Mr. Chairman, thank you for giving me this time. I
also, just a point of personal privilege, real quick. I am
looking forward to the confirmation of Adam Telle. We were baby
staffers together, brand new in Richard Shelby's office. Got to
know each other. I've never met a bigger Mississippi State fan
in my life, by the way. So, you'll get ready for that.
But worked with he and his wife through the years. He is a
true public servant. He is a tireless advocate for America's
infrastructure. I mean, in addition to that, he happens to be
an Alabama native. And so, I know he knows firsthand the needs
and how significant the inland waterway system is for our
country's continued growth. So, I am excited about getting him
confirmed, and getting him in place, and having him in front of
this committee, Mr. Chairman.
Senator Kennedy. Thank you, Senator. Senator Rounds.
Senator Rounds. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Acting Assistant Secretary Forsgren, it's good to see you
here today. I'd like to talk about the Tribal Partnership
Program, or TPP. It's been a very successful program in my
State of South Dakota. This program provides Federal support to
Tribes for projects related to environmental restoration, flood
mitigation, and protection of natural and cultural resources.
The Water Resources Development Act award of 2024 made the
Tribal Partnership Program permanent, allowing the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers to continue supporting this important work.
Do you believe the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers currently has
the resources necessary to effectively continue executing
projects under the TPP?
Mr. Forsgren. Yes, Senator, I believe we do. There are many
ways that we can reach the goals of that partnership to work
with Tribes to enhance their water infrastructure.
Senator Rounds. Good. Look, I think these Tribal nations
really do want to have an ongoing and working relationship.
These are areas that can really improve the economic
opportunities and literally the safety in those areas as well.
Consultation is critical. They appreciate not only the idea
that we can work together, but the clear evidence is when we
actually ask their opinion, we get their feedback, and then we
work in a consultative way to get a project done.
Mr. Forsgren. We commit to continuing the Tribal
consultations.
Senator Rounds. Thank you, sir.
Lieutenant General Graham, thank you, first of all, for
being here today. And thank you for your service to our
country. Nearly 1 year ago, Southeastern South Dakota
experienced some catastrophic flooding, record rainfall.
Destroyed numerous homes and caused significant damage to
public infrastructure.
General Graham, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers plays a
vital role in flood response efforts. Each year, Congress
allocates funds specifically for disaster-related flood work,
enabling the Corps to support, preparedness response and
recovery measures. In your view, does the Corps currently have
the capability to adequately prepare local communities for
large scale flooding?
General Graham. So, Senator, on the emergency response
side, on Public Law 84-99, I believe, we do work closely to use
those authorities and those appropriations to the maximum
extent possible. We've been very aggressive with that over the
last couple years. And then working with the Federal Emergency
Management Agency under the Stafford Act, we can bring in the
expertise of the Corps on flooding, particularly to the area
along the Big Sioux River.
I'm excited to see in the President's budget that we've got
a new start for a study to take a look at the Corps project
that exists there and see if we can improve it, understand that
putting a dirt berm across I-29 is probably not the best
solution we could come up with it. It was what they could back
in the '70s, but so our commitment to you is we're excited to
see this is a known problem, and we're committed to working
with you to solving this.
Senator Rounds. There was a beautiful residential district
there called McCook Lake. And basically, what this did was to
divert the water, and it diverted it right through that
residential district. There's a better way to do it, and we'll
look forward to working with you to see that we find the
appropriate plans so that when this happens again in the
future, and it will, that those types of flooding conditions
are diverted so that there is less damage to public property
and infrastructure in that region.
General Graham. Thank you, sir.
Senator Rounds. Assistant Secretary Cameron, first of all,
I want to thank you for being here today. As you know, Congress
has authorized the Bureau of Reclamation to design and
construct rural water supply projects. These projects are
intended to deliver potable water to rural communities in
western States.
To advance large scale water projects two types of Federal
authorization are required. First, the authority to conduct a
feasibility study, and the authority to construct the project.
The three regional water organizations in South Dakota are
currently seeking congressional authorization to conduct
feasibility studies. If these entities receive the necessary
authorizations, will the Bureau of Reclamation have the
capacity to promptly initiate and complete these studies?
Mr. Cameron. Thank you for that question, Senator. We are
committed to working with those communities to help them figure
out how we can proceed with feasibility studies. And, in the
event that Congress authorizes the work, we will find a path to
advance that activity.
Senator Rounds. In a timely fashion.
Mr. Cameron. Yes, sir, given the availability of resources.
Senator Rounds. Okay. I noticed that the budget is not the
best this year. It means that if we can get some money in there
for that purpose, we'll get it done.
Mr. Cameron. Yes, happy to work with you on that, sir. I
point out that you mentioned Tribes earlier. We are
prioritizing rural water projects that have some connection to
Tribes as well inside the President's budget, given our trust
responsibility to Tribes. And often, there are Indian water
rights settlements as Congress has passed that. We're trying to
implement that.
Senator Rounds. That's part of the projects that we've got
going on, so I look forward to working with you to accomplish
it this year. Thank you, sir. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Senator Kennedy. Senator Merkley.
Senator Merkley. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. And you
can see we're dashing in and out of many different hearings
this morning. So, I really appreciate the chance to come and
ask a couple of questions.
And I wanted to start, Mr. Forsgren, about the Cole Rivers
Hatchery. Cole Rivers sounds like a name of a river, but
actually it's the name of a person for a hatchery that's on the
Rogue River, one of the most extraordinary rivers in the world.
This hatchery provides fish for not just the Rogue River, but
for lakes, for the Umpqua River. It is like incredibly
important, and we've had huge cooperation with the Army Corps
in working on it.
But even with that, it seems like progress is very slow as
though study after studies gets completed, yet the actual
implementation of the restoration is proceeding way, way too
slowly. I want to know if the Corps fully understands how
important this hatchery is dedicated to its rehabilitation. The
supply of clean water is essential. We've took quite a bit of
work just to get steady supply of electricity to this site. And
let me stop there and just say, are you familiar with the
project, and are you all in on helping us restore the hatchery?
Mr. Forsgren. Senator, I must admit, I am familiar only at
the--I'll call it 60,000-foot level as to the project. I'll
defer to General Graham on more specifics on that particular
project. I don't want to tell you wrong.
General Graham. So, Senator, we understand the importance
of that hatchery and Oregon's running it for us. We've got
money, I think it was in fiscal year 2024 to fix the roof, but
we know it has a failed water supply. Still challenges with the
transformer, and we will continue to push make our best
technical recommendations for the budget packages to make those
fixes.
Senator Merkley. So, the Portland District has identified
significant capacity of, they refer to it as capability, to
support going more aggressively to attack the challenges at
this hatchery. I mean, years of it being a priority. You
mentioned a roof, like it's a complete rebuild. Even the
challenge of the water not being properly supplied and
filtered, causing the death of a number of the hatchery
projects. And it's like, have we gotten to the point that we
can't even figure out how to get clean water, steady
electricity, steady filtering?
So, what would the Army Corps be able to do if Congress
were to appropriate full capability for this project, given the
Portland District is telling us they have that capability?
Mr. Forsgren. I will put some context over, and then I'm
going to let General Graham give the specifics. Capabilities
are always done in the context of the totality of the budget
and the resources and the needs in a given district, in a given
division, and nationwide. And so, yes, you know, the Corps may
have on paper have the capacity to do this or that as a
complete focus on that project to the exchange of other--you
know, to the detriment of other projects in the same region.
So, you--it's really to say that a district has capacity is
always a little bit of an unfair thing, because it has to take
into account the totality of the program.
Senator Merkley. Because of my shortage of time, I'll just
note, here's the deal. When these dams were built, a promise
was made to everyone that the Corps would make sure that these
hatcheries provided the fish that could not go upriver to
spawn. That promise is being broken. It is extremely important
that that be understood, and that promise be upheld. And that
means we've got to get the clean water, not just studied, but
supplied. We've got to get the filtering equipment, not just
thought about, but rebuilt and so, so forth.
I'm down to 20 seconds, so I'm going to switch gears to
Scoggins Dam. Last month, my office noted, after 20 years of
planning, the Bureau of Reclamation made the decision to
rescope and downsize the planned structural reconstruction of
the dam safety project at Scoggins Dam.
Why is this scary to everyone? Because we are reaching the
point in that several 100-year cycle where a major earthquake
occurs, the big one, if you will, and that dam and releasing
the water out of it would flood down that valley and wipe out
urban areas.
And yet, after 20 years of investment in planning, we are
hearing that the goal of strengthening that dam to prevent that
type of catastrophe is being abandoned. Why?
Mr. Cameron. Senator, I'll have to look at the particulars
there. I can tell you more broadly that we are committed to dam
safety around the Nation, and we're pleased that Congress still
has provided some funds for the bipartisan infrastructure law
to spend money on dam safety in addition to what's in the
President's budget. But I'll have to get back to you on the
particulars of that, sir.
Senator Merkley. Were the partners who used the dam supply
water consulted on the factors that went into this decision?
Mr. Cameron. I not prepared to answer that question. I just
don't have the information at hand, but I will get back to you,
sir, on that.
Senator Merkley. The answer is they were not. Can you
commit to ensuring that the Bureau will work with the community
on a path forward?
Mr. Cameron. I can absolutely commit to that, sir.
Senator Merkley. Thank You. Mr. Chairman, not seeing any of
my colleagues across the aisle, I have one more question if you
have time for it.
Senator Kennedy. Sure, go ahead.
Senator Merkley. Yes. So, I wanted to address the challenge
in the Klamath Basin. It's been plagued by drought for many
years. Water is precious in the basin and vital to the survival
of the community. The stakeholders have all come together to
support each other in a whole variety of projects.
One of those projects was to install sensors. They're
referred to as SCADA sensors along the Klamath Project to allow
real-time water evaluation in order to do real-time water
management. This was passed into law in March 2022. The sensors
have not been installed. Can anyone give me a sense of when
this project is going to be completed?
Mr. Cameron. I'm not prepared to give you a timeline right
now, Senator. I will say we are aware of that issue with the
SCADA sensors and believe the funding is available to move
ahead. But I'd be happy to provide a schedule for you after the
hearing.
Senator Merkley. Thank you. If you'll commit to briefing me
and my staff, I'd certainly appreciate it.
Mr. Cameron. Absolutely, sir.
Senator Merkley. I'll tell you folks, go, listen, that $5
million is written into law. This first phase of this is
putting sensors on poles that stick in bodies of water. How is
it? We seem to go years unable to get a project funded. That's
it's funded, but nothing happens. And that is really
frustrating. We're only a few months into this administration,
but maybe the team, the new team, can get this done.
Mr. Cameron. We'll look into it, and we'll look forward to
briefing you and your staff on a path forward, sir.
Senator Merkley. Thank you.
Senator Kennedy. Senator Peters.
Senator Peters. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Gentlemen, welcome to the committee. I want to start by
first focusing on the Soo Locks a project of national
significance. Simply put an unscheduled outage of the poll
lock, which is the largest lock at the Soo would devastate the
economy, harm our manufacturing sector, and jeopardize national
security. To put things into perspective, just a 6-month
unscheduled outage at the Soo would result in an estimated 11
million jobs lost, and $1.1 trillion hit to the economy. That's
a classic definition of critical infrastructure.
The bottom line is we need a second poll lock to alleviate
the risk, and I've been leading the charge with a lot of my
colleagues for quite some time. Most recently, I led a
bipartisan and bicameral letter advocating for the inclusion of
Soo Lock's funding in the most recent Army Corps work plan and
budget request.
And I want to say thank you thank you for answering that
call. Crucially, the $264 million included in the work plan
will allow for the award of all remaining construction
contracts, which is a big deal. And the budget request matches
the project's full work capability for this fiscal year,
something that I'm going to work to ensure makes it into the
final funding bill.
But looking ahead I'm going to be doing everything in my
power to see that this critical project actually gets
completed. I think we're on a good track, but we always got to
keep the eye on the ball.
And so, that's my question to you Secretary Forsgren and
General Graham, if you could let me know, can I count on you to
make sure we get this thing across the finish line, and make
sure I continue to have your focus?
Mr. Forsgren. Senator, yes is the short answer. The longer
answer is the President is committed to maintaining the
integrity of the inland waterway and national lock system. It
is, as you so articulately laid out, it is the backbone of the
economy of this country, and we cannot afford as a Nation to
let that happen. And I commit we will be working forward,
looking for ways forward to enhance that system.
Senator Peters. Great. I appreciate that general,
General Graham. And Senator Peters, absolutely. It was
great to see the funding and the work plan allowing us to hit
those last three options. And to Chairman Kennedy, that's how
we safely deliver quality projects on schedule, within budget,
is we keep the efficient funding flowing, and then we can--I
mean, we're never going to get better prices than what we had
locked in to finish those last three options up at the Soo. I'm
heading up there in a few weeks to make sure that there are no
surprises up there, and that the team on the ground has
everything they need to continue to deliver. And I think we're
on track for 2030, which is exciting.
Senator Peters. Great, great. Good to hear. Good to have
you back up there soon as well.
Speaking of the Soo, I also hope that both of you will work
with me to establish a special salary rate table for Soo Lock
operational and maintenance positions. I think both of you
understand the challenge of getting folks there. The
reliability of the Soo Lock complex is going to hinge on those
workers, and for a variety of reasons it is very challenging.
So, to both of you, again, can I count on your help to make
sure we have adequate staffing for the facility as it operates?
General Graham. Senator Peters, absolutely. That wonderful
investment to make sure that this key piece of infrastructure,
as you laid out, will only serve the public well if we have the
right staff there. And based on kind of some irregularities,
I'll call it in kind of how the pay model works, getting the
special salary rate through will allow us to pay our staff what
we believe they're worth. And so, you have our commitment.
Senator Peters. Great. Appreciate that. I appreciate that,
thank you. Next, I want to talk to you about the importance of
the Brandon Road in our basin project, as you know, invasive
bighead and silver carp, pose a truly an unprecedented risk to
the Great Lakes, which together support a $7 billion fishing
industry, a $16 billion boating industry, and roughly about $6
trillion in the regional economy.
At present, the electric dispersal barriers in the Chicago
Sanitary and Ship Canal represent the sole structural measure
to deter invasive carp from reaching Lake Michigan where this
remains our primary line of defense against the steady advance
of this invasive carp. It would only be a matter of time before
the bighead and silver carp established themselves in the Great
Lakes decimating the ecosystem or fishing or boating
recreational industries as well.
The Brandon Road Project is a solution to this problem, and
it'll employ the precise measures necessary to halt the spread
of carp before they reach the Great Lakes. I think this project
is nothing short of critical to the lasting health of the Great
Lakes. And as both of you know, I think time is of the essence
as well.
So, my question for both of you, again, similar, can I
count on you to work with me and my colleagues here in
Congress, as well as both the States of Michigan and Illinois,
to keep this project moving in the right direction? It's been a
project for years in the making, but again, time is of the
essence and your forceful assistance is necessary.
Mr. Forsgren. Senator, I have the luxury in this particular
instance and being able to quote the President directly on it,
and that is he's fully committed to that project. I know he,
and your governor, worked very closely on that project. And you
might guess my direction vis-a-vis that project is to see that
happens. We got great help from, as was mentioned, the
President and the governor. We were able to get the real estate
secured that we need. We released Contract 1A, which is the
leading-edge bubbler of this multi-tiered defense. And so, that
will be the start of fish deterrence. And so, that's exciting
to see that contract on the streets.
Senator Peters. Excellent. Well, thank you. Thank you both.
Mr. Cameron. Senator, if I could add.
Senator Peters. Oh yes.
Mr. Cameron. The Interior Department is also actively
involved with supporting the Corps and their work there. So,
it's not Reclamation, but our Geological Survey and the Fish
and Wildlife Service are both actively involved.
Senator Peters. Excellent. Thank you. Thank you, Mr.
Chairman.
Senator Kennedy. I've got a few questions, gentlemen. Let
me start with you, Mr. Secretary. I'm trying to understand how
you, and all of you, and OMB, are thinking here. Where's the
money come from for the Inland Waterways Trust Fund?
Mr. Forsgren. Senator, it's principally raised by tax on
the diesel fuel used in the tug and barge industry.
Senator Kennedy. Yes. Do you know the balance in that
account off the top of your head?
Mr. Forsgren. I don't know off the top of my head. I I'll
be happy to provide that to you for the record----
Senator Kennedy. Okay.
Mr. Forsgren. But it is not insignificant.
Senator Kennedy. I'm sorry.
Mr. Forsgren. The number, the balance is not insignificant.
Senator Kennedy. Okay. The proposed budget proposes not to
spend it. Why would we--it can't be used for anything else. Why
would we not spend it?
Mr. Forsgren. Sir, well, first of all, most of the needs
that with--I hate I'm going to kind of back up with the Corps's
capabilities. Most of the needs that we were currently capable
of using that trust fund for were moved forward into the 2025
spending plan. So, a lot of that were taken care--a lot of
those projects were funded in 2025 pretty close to their full
capabilities in the interim future.
And it also, the advantage of the trust funds is that
they're designed to be for monies to be raised to used,
including out years, you know, and over a longer period of
time. So, you know, we moved the funds forward into 2025 for
most of the projects that we're currently ongoing. And then the
projects, you know, there were balances left that will be used
in future years to fund projects as they come up and the Corps
capability come available.
Senator Kennedy. So, Mr. Secretary, you're saying you don't
need the money right now?
Mr. Forsgren. No, sir. We're going to need the money very
soon.
Senator Kennedy. I'm talking about right now. It's a timing
issue?
Mr. Forsgren. I would say largely, sir, yes. That there
could--we always use some. You know, what we don't want to do
is get into a situation where we're trying to spend money just
because it's about to expire.
Senator Kennedy. Agreed.
Mr. Forsgren. We'd rather find that--you know, fund it as
the project's needed as they go forward.
Senator Kennedy. Where's the money come from for the Harbor
Maintenance Trust Fund?
Mr. Forsgren. Sir, it's a value-based user fee that is
charged against cargo, all cargoes, entering or exiting United
States.
Senator Kennedy. Okay. It's got some money in it, doesn't
it?
Mr. Forsgren. It does. And again, to be used over time.
Senator Kennedy. Right. This proposed budget only proposes
using $1.7 billion. Is that right?
Mr. Forsgren. Yes, sir.
Senator Kennedy. That's below the mark that we set. Is it
not?
Mr. Forsgren. Yes sir.
Senator Kennedy. How come?
Mr. Forsgren. Again, more of a timing issue. Some of the
things were moved forward, others, it--the President did put a
focus on what were principal Federal responsibilities, which is
the maintenance and dredging of Federal channels. And so,
again, the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund is to be used over
time for those projects.
Senator Kennedy. Okay. Well, nobody's thinking about using
this money for something else. Are they?
Mr. Forsgren. No, sir.
Senator Kennedy. Okay. General, I want to ask you a
question about bringing these projects in on budget and on
time. I know you said it was engineering, we got to get the
engineering right, project management right, team right. Let me
give you an example. I'm not going beat this to death, and I'm
just picking a project. We've got a lot of projects in
Louisiana, just like Alaska. A lot of projects. Everybody has a
lot of projects. But the Inner Harbor Navigation Canal in New
Orleans, 10 years ago, we projected it would cost about $951
million. Now, the cost is up to about $4.7 billion. And the
courses, it'll take 14 years. I mean, I understand inflation,
but why? And I'm using this as an example.
General Graham. So, Senator, the Inner Harbor Navigation
Canal down there where the intercoastal waterway bisects and
gets across and up onto the Mississippi River is absolutely
key. And you know, the history that we've had on multiple
lawsuits and injunctions over the years, a lot of it built from
the lack of trust from the local communities, particularly the
Lower Ninth Ward.
So, that cost estimate, and I, for everybody who's
listening, that IHNC (Inner Harbor Navigation Canal) is also
part of the flood protection for the greater New Orleans area,
the river facing gates. So, it's imperative that we get this
right. And what I told the district to do is to make sure that
they have put in their cost estimates, the risks associated.
Most of those risks are the fact that--not the fact, most of
those risks are elements of not having local support to build
this. We want to get a team together.
Senator Kennedy. How do you quantify that?
General Graham. So, that's what we owe you. You take a risk
that it's going to get delayed, and then you try your best to
put money associated with that would get delayed. So, we
would've loved to build this thing for less than $1 billion 10
years ago, but the court cases have prevented us from doing
that. The lack of trust from the citizens of the Lower Ninth
Ward have prevented us from doing that. So, we're trying to
build that trust so that we don't end up in this infinite loop
of litigation.
Senator Kennedy. I got it. All right. Senator Murkowski,
I'm going to ask General--ask you one more question. And you're
well aware of all this. For whatever reason, sea levels are
rising, our land in South Louisiana is sinking. Part of that is
because over time, sediment becomes more and more compacted.
Where did that sediment come from? That sediment came from the
Mississippi River, which used to overflow, which was a blessing
and a curse.
But our Corps did an extraordinary job at our request of
levying the Mississippi River. We weighed the cost and the
benefit and said the right thing to do here is to levy the
river. Well, that obviously stopped the sediment. And I'm not
suggesting we take the levies down.
[Laughter.]
Senator Kennedy. What do we do? We're not going to take the
levies down. The land's sinking. There's no new sediment coming
in. The sediment's becoming more compacted, and the sea levels
are rising. What would you do, if you were king for a day?
General, let me start with you, and then I'll ask the
secretary.
General Graham. Sure. Chairman Kennedy, so some of the
projects are that we have a tremendous amount of non-structural
projects going on in Southeast.
Senator Kennedy. Yes. And I'm not asking you to comment on
any particular project. I get all the politics, and the
wailing, and the national gnashing of teeth. And everybody's
bows are in an uproar over which one's the best one. I get
that. I'm just asking, what approach should we take?
General Graham. So, raising homes to deal with sea level
rise coming up in the land sinking, that non-structural
approach is a tool that we're starting to execute at scale in
Southern Louisiana. What we're also taking a look at is
supporting the State of Louisiana in whatever sediment
diversion pass that it's choosing to take. They had applied for
a permit and granted it.
Senator Kennedy. Do you think sediment diversion works?
General Graham. In some instances, I believe it does. It
has to be done very carefully. And in anytime we move the
Mississippi River off from where it's going to someplace else,
that's going to have tremendous forces. And so, we have to take
a look at that mindfully. But I believe we have the engineering
expertise and working in conjunction with the State, I believe
that we can use that tool effectively.
Senator Kennedy. Now, do you--on the sediment diversion,
are you saying we should do it in small amounts, pilot
projects, or larger amounts, or does that matter?
General Graham. I think pilot projects to prove that we
know what we think we know are always wise.
Senator Kennedy. So, you're thinking of a pilot project?
General Graham. I think those----
Senator Kennedy. We've done some.
General Graham. We have done some.
Senator Kennedy. We don't have enough pilots.
General Graham. I owe you a better, more detailed answer on
that.
Senator Kennedy. Okay. What do you think, Mr. Secretary?
Mr. Forsgren. Senator, I certainly agree that the Corps's
expertise in moving and doing sediment projects and doing a
traditional Corps approach is--will be one of the tools that
has to happen. I think we need to think about the other side of
some of the stuff the Corps does, and that's using the
regulatory program to create some incentives for the private
sector to do positive things.
Senator Kennedy. For example?
Mr. Forsgren. I'll use a perfect example in South
Louisiana. Right now, in the 404 Program, we cannot give a
mitigation bank credit for preventing subsidence losses of
wetlands. Those coastal wetlands losses are mounting to about
the only losses nationally in wetlands resources.
But we can't--we don't have a mechanism now between law,
between--I don't think it's law, it's really regulation, that
would allow someone--for example, there are several large
landowners down there that at a relatively low cost, you know,
a few million dollars could, you know, barrier the breaches
that have been in the--into the coastal wetlands for a long
time and put some that would stop some of the salt water
incursion, which accelerates the wetlands losses and some of
the subsidence.
But if they could sell credits for 404 purposes for
elsewhere in Louisiana, that would provide the economic
incentive for doing that. But we don't have--we can do it. So,
now, you've got people in South Louisiana going up to North
Louisiana to buy credits to do development.
Senator Kennedy. Got you.
Mr. Forsgren. There's a mismatch. We need to find more
creative ways, some more creative ways to use the regulatory
system in a positive manner to help.
Senator Kennedy. Okay. I want to sit down--we'll sit down
and talk about that.
Mr. Forsgren. Absolutely, Senator.
Senator Kennedy. Thank you for your creative thinking. I
want to be sure I understand you, General, you think diversion
works?
General Graham. I believe there's cases where it can be
part of the solution. Yes.
Senator Kennedy. You think it can work in South Louisiana?
General Graham. Yes.
Senator Kennedy. Okay. Senator.
Senator Murkowski. I love these conversations. This is why
the Corps is so important. Quite honestly, we need really smart
people who are really good engineers to figure out some of
these challenges. Whether it is what you're facing down there
in Louisiana with the loss of your wetlands, and the
subsidence, and all that. We got other problems up north that
come about through coastal erosion, river erosion, the
permafrost melting. We've got subsidence there. It's just a
different kind.
But at the end of the day, we're all looking to the Corps
for many of these answers. And like your situation in
Louisiana, there is no small project that I can find in the
State of Alaska. The thing that should be simple is not simple.
These are legacy projects, and whether it's Lowell Point, most
people in America will never hear of Lowell Creek Tunnel and
why it's important, but it's going to save a little community
like Seward.
But honest to God, it's 20 years maybe more in the making.
I'm not even going to count the dollars. But that's not what I
want to talk to you about today. I want to talk to you about
the Port of Nome, because I'm worried that as we're looking at
your budget, what we are talking about here today, the projects
that are important to Alaska and Louisiana, the amount of folks
that we've got at the Corps, coupled with the decrease in the
budget, problems like we're facing in Juneau with the
jokulhlaups, that is a Norwegian term for glacial outburst
flooding, which just about on August 7 of each year, the people
of Juneau are visited by a massive flood where a glacier rises
up because you've got so much volume under this basin, floods
the river, floods, the area. We need some smart engineering
solutions, and it's not going to get any cheaper to the Port of
Nome every single time, whether it's in public hearing like
this or in private conversations in my office.
The Corps has assured me that the Port of Nome is a
priority project. They realize that the United States of
America needs a deep-water port given Nome's strategic
advantage where it's sitting right up there, right directly
across from Russia. All of the traffic that we're seeing coming
through the Bering Strait, nobody disagrees that this is a
significant port.
And yet, when I look at the budget request, I'm just
confused. I'm just confused because you've got a port that is
not getting any cheaper. We all recognize that the problem is
that when you don't have adequate funding in the beginning, the
costs are only going to increase. I'm hoping Mr. Forsgren, that
you're going to have some creative ways that you can share with
me today about either funding streams or perhaps it's on the
regulatory side to help lessen the burden.
But when you've got short construction season, when you've
got logistical challenges for places that are not contiguous to
the rest of the United States, you know the challenges that we
have. First question, and I hope I know the answer to this; is
the Port of Nome a priority for the U.S. Army Corps?
General Graham. Yes, Senator.
Senator Murkowski. Okay.
Mr. Forsgren. The fact that it was included for funding,
specifically by name, demonstrates that commitment.
Senator Murkowski. And I think that that's good. And I take
that for what it is, but I'm concerned that when you don't
include meaningful funding. Basically, there's $3 million here.
It looks to me that this is--what we're talking about is a
contingency amount for a prior year's funding rather than
looking at the project, evaluating the need, and putting the
commitment behind it. How am I supposed to read the commitment
from the Corps about a project like this with a budget like
this? And I know you anticipated that question.
Mr. Forsgren. I did, but that doesn't make the answer any
easier.
Senator Murkowski. No, it doesn't, because it defies a
rational explanation, in my view.
Mr. Forsgren. Senator, all I can say is, the Port of Nome
is a commitment, is a project that the administration has
committed to. And we are--there have been a number of
challenges at the Port of Nome, contracting and others, that
have put us in a place where the exact level of resources that
we thought we could execute in the short-term is uncertain. And
so, yes, and I'll defer.
General Graham. So, Senator, we're working through the
solicitation right now, and the bids, and working to see if we
can get to an award. And that's with the $250 million that we
have on hand. The $3 million in 2026, we would use to advance
the next feature, the engineering for the next feature. That's
the east breakwater. So, we are moving that forward. The key is
getting to award this year for the causeway extension, and I'm
still--that's our goal. But we're not quite there yet.
Senator Murkowski. So, the last time we talked about this
we've had many, many, many conversations about this. The effort
was going to be to see if you couldn't attract more interest
from outside contractors. I'm told that that has happened. I'm
told that we're further along with getting a successful bid out
there, but what you're both sharing with me today by body
language and words is not very comforting.
General Graham. Actually, we're further along, certainly,
Senator. This is still all part of the acquisition process.
Talked to the district yesterday and they're optimistic.
Senator Murkowski. And define optimistic. Does that mean
that we get, we get through the bid process this summer?
General Graham. That's what they're optimistic about. Yes.
Senator Murkowski. And do we actually do anything physical
this year,
General Graham. Moving Rock this year. Senator, I owe you
an answer on that. As you said, the construction season's
short, and I can't remember offhand the sequence of buying
rock. So, I owe you an answer on that.
Senator Murkowski. I think you need to talk to your folks
in Alaska. I'm sure you have. The assurance that I got was that
we were going to be seeing physical activity this year. This
year. And we know what happens in Nome after October when the
ice comes in and everything--all work effectively stops.
So, what you're sharing with me is we're going to be better
off on paper. You're going to try to move some rock, but I just
don't want one stack moved from one corner to another. Either
stop calling it a priority project and just acknowledge that
the Corps and the administration is saying that the Arctic is
no longer significant, and I refuse to accept that for an
answer. Or put some direction to this in a way that is
aggressive, that is meaningful and is responsive to what we're
seeing 57 miles across the water in Russia.
I think we're an embarrassment when we say one thing and we
simply do not move to facilitate it in a way that could be
recognized as positive. So, I don't mean to be lectury, but I
am so frustrated with where we are on Port of Nome right now. I
know you've got a lot of other projects in Alaska that we're
working on. We go through our checklist all the time. We're
making some good progress there, thank you. We need to deal
with Lowell Point, we need to deal with--and we need to deal
all this stuff.
But in the meantime, the Arctic is not waiting. Right now,
there's more interest in the administration with Greenland for
an Arctic port. That's inexcusable. We have Alaska, right?
Anyway, thank you Mr. Chairman. Thank you, gentlemen.
ADDITIONAL COMMITTEE QUESTIONS
Senator Kennedy. All right, gentlemen. Thank you. We'll
meet again. We'll talk some more. The hearing record will
remain open for a week. My colleagues can submit additional
information, if they would like. Thank you for being here
today. If you get questions, please respond to them in a
reasonable amount of time, both for this hearing and generally.
[The following questions were not asked at the hearing, but
were submitted to the Department for response subsequent to the
hearing:]
Questions Submitted to Mr. D. Lee Forsgren
Questions Submitted by Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith
Question. Secretary Forsgren and General Graham, Arkabutla Lake is
a federally authorized flood control reservoir that stores floodwater
to provide vital flood protection for a large portion of northwest
Mississippi. In May 2023, the Corps issued an emergency declaration
after it discovered a depression at the toe of the Arkabutla dam, which
could result in a dam breach if left untreated. Mississippians--
particularly those who live or own property below the dam--have been on
pins and needles ever since. On multiple occasions over the past 2
years--usually in the spring--there have been instances where
substantial rain events have caused the lake to fill up. In response,
the Corps has declared potential breach emergencies, 24-hour dam
surveillance has been activated, and so on. The Corps Vicksburg
District has and continues to work hard to correct the problem. But
Mississippians are very eager for the Corps to get this corrected,
sooner rather than later. Will you work with me to help expedite the
Arkabutla dam repairs as quickly as possible? I have requested funding
above the budget request to address this issue. If enacted into law,
how will the Corps put those funds to good use, swiftly and
effectively?
Answer. The Corps is working expeditiously to address the safety
concern at this dam. Consistent with this objective, the Budget
provided the full amount that the Corps estimated that it could use
effectively and efficiently in FY 2026. Since then, the Corps has
revised its approach to the pre-construction engineering and design
phase of this project, which may affect the amount that it could use
effectively and efficiently in FY 2026. At this point, our focus is on
making the best use of the enacted FY 2025 funds.
______
Questions Submitted by Senator Tammy Baldwin
Question. For the past several years, I have supported the
Navigation Ecosystem Sustainability Program, which has made great
progress on the ecosystem restoration activities under that authority.
When will Lock and Dam 25 be ready for funding?
Answer. So far, $732 million has been appropriated for design and
construction of Lock and Dam 25. The Corps is continuing work on the
project using these funds.
______
Questions Submitted by Senator Martin Heinrich
Question. The enacted 2024 Water Resources Development Act included
a provision to carry out planning, design, and construction measures
for the Middle Rio Grande Bosque. This project is crucial for wildlife
prevention and restoration. How does the Army Corps plan to balance
wildfire prevention and restoration efforts with the need to maintain
water flow and protect this ecosystem, especially the removal of jetty
jacks?
Answer. In January 2004, Congress authorized the Corps to assist
with the planning, design, and construction of measures for wildfire
prevention and restoration in the Middle Rio Grande bosque in and
around the City of Albuquerque in accordance with PL 108-137,
Operations and Maintenance, Section 116. Under this authorization, the
Corps developed a plan in partnership with the Bureau of Reclamation
and the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District to identify jetty jacks
that could safely be removed without compromising the flood mitigation
function while maintaining flow levels in the river and bosque
ecosystem. The 2024 authorization expands this authorization to the
entire Middle Rio Grande and under this authorization, the Corps would
expand the plan in partnership with the Bureau of Reclamation and the
Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District, and in coordination with
relevant landowners and stakeholders.
Question. If the Corps is not appropriated the full amount for the
acequia irrigation infrastructure program, how is the agency planning
to fill the funding gap between shovel-ready work and the appropriated
amount?
Answer. The Corps awarded two acequia construction contracts in FY
2025 (Farmers and La Joya) and plans to award another contract in FY
2026 (Rio Chama-Chamita). The Corps has sufficient funds on hand for
that work.
______
Questions Submitted by Senator Gary C. Peters
Question. While I am pleased to see that the FY2026 Army Corps
Budget Request called for much-needed funding for the Soo Locks and
Brandon Road, I am disappointed to see that two vital flood risk
mitigation studies--one in Southeast Michigan and the other in the
Midland region--were left out.
Let me be clear, there remains work to be done on these studies.
Recognizing that, the Detroit District is working on Additional
Resources Requests for both studies, and the non-Federal sponsors are
fully on board.
Be assured, I'm going to fight to secure the full funding for these
studies through the appropriations process, because these communities
simply can't afford to see the progress made to date come to a halt.
Secretary Forsgren and General Graham, I urge you to approve these
Additional Resources Requests as soon as possible and work with me to
ensure additional funding is provided to match those resource requests.
Can I count on your support for these studies--both the Southeast
Michigan Flood Risk Management Feasibility Study and the Tittabawassee
River Watershed Flood Risk Management Feasibility Study?
Answer. The FY 2025 Corps work plan provided $1.2 million for each
of these studies, which is the amount that the Corps estimated that it
would need to fund the remaining Federal share of their cost. At the
start of FY 2026, the Corps had more than $1 million in unobligated
funds on each of these studies and estimated that it could not use any
further funds in FY 2026.
Question. I am also frustrated to see that the Great Lakes Coastal
Resiliency Study--something that has long enjoyed strong bipartisan
support--was unfunded in both the FY2025 Work Plan and the FY2026
Budget Request.
This study represents a first of its kind effort to develop a
coordinated strategy to manage and protect the Great Lakes and its
5,200-mile coastline from threats associated with lake level
fluctuations, erosion, flooding, nutrient runoff, and aging
infrastructure.
Secretary Forsgren and General Graham, what is the Administration's
rationale for leaving this study--which was already underway--unfunded?
Answer. The Army allocated the available funds to other studies and
projects. The Corps had significant unobligated prior-year funds on
hand for this study in those years. At the start of FY 2025, it had
roughly $4.2 million. At the start of FY 2026, it had roughly $2.3
million.
______
Questions Submitted to Lieutenant General William H. Graham, Jr.
Questions Submitted by Senator Tammy Baldwin
Question. The Corps' FY25 work plan allocates $264.1 million to the
Soo Lock project, but I understand that the project needed $314.5
million in FY25 to fund all of the contract options that expire at the
end of FY25. Will the Corps' FY26 budget request for the Soo Lock
project include enough funds to complete all of the contract options
expiring at the end of FY25 as well as the remaining upper approach
wall work and future modifications planned for FY26?
Answer. The FY25 Work Plan contained funding required to award all
remaining options on the Phase 3 portion of the new lock construction
project at the Soo prior to expiration. The additional amount
referenced (i.e., the delta between $314.5 million and $264.1 million)
would have been used for other work, such as partially funding the
remaining upper approach wall work or addressing potential construction
contract modifications in FY26. The FY26 President's Budget amount for
this project would be used to complete the remaining upper approach
wall work and address potential construction contract modifications
required in FY26.
______
Questions Submitted to Mr. Scott J. Cameron
Questions Submitted by Senator Martin Heinrich
Question. Can you provide a project update for the Navajo Gallup
Water Supply Project? How does the Bureau plan to meet your legal and
trust obligations to this project?
Answer. The Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) has made significant
progress on the Navajo-Gallup Water Supply Project (NGWSP), completing
over 70% since breaking ground in 2012. The first of the two
independent water transmission systems, the Cutter Lateral, was
completed in 2020 and has since been delivering drinking water to over
1,550 homes/6,200 people in eight Navajo chapters. Water deliveries
began to the Teepee Junction portion of the Jicarilla Apache Nation in
fall of 2024.
On the San Juan Lateral, Reclamation is more than 60% finished,
with 185 miles of the 200 miles of that water transmission system
installed or under contract. Reclamation completed two large
construction contracts this spring, including the Navajo Code Talkers
Sublateral that will be able to deliver water to the Window Rock/Ft.
Defiance, Arizona area. There are currently 3 large active construction
contracts, including the San Juan Lateral Water Treatment Plant, and
Reclamation is scheduled to award 10 more construction contracts over
the next 2 = years to complete the Project in accordance with Public
Law 111-11.
Public Law 118-158 (extended through the end of FY 2025 by Public
Law 119-4) increased the NGWSP's FY 2025 appropriation ceiling to
$1.640 billion, allowing Reclamation to allocate $120 million to NGWSP
from the Reclamation Water Settlement Fund (RWSF) as well as an
additional $25 million from the FY 2025 Operating Plan within Water &
Related Resources to fully fund anticipated FY 2025 capabilities.
Question. Reclamation has historically been a strong partner in the
Middle Rio Grande Endangered Species Collaborative. The Collaborative
has recently had difficulty drawing down funds. Can we expect funding
disruptions are over and that this partnership will continue?
How does Reclamation plan to meet your Endangered Species Act
requirements without fully supporting programs like the Collaborative?
Answer. Reclamation's water delivery and power generation mission
will continue while meeting our environmental responsibilities on
individual projects, including the Middle Rio Grand Project. Funding
levels for ESA-related activities for this project that meet these
responsibilities has remained consistent at approximately $4 million in
FY 2023, FY 2024, and 2025. The FY 2026 budget request anticipates
similar funding levels.
Question. Can you provide an update on the status of the El Vado
Dam construction?
Answer. Reclamation is in the process of evaluating preliminary
alternatives to move forward into design. A value planning study was
performed to identify ways to reduce project costs and schedule. A
field exploration campaign is underway to better understand the
foundation and embankment material properties and inform upcoming
design phases.
Question. How will Reclamation honor its commitment to completing
the Eastern New Mexico Rural Water Supply Project--an authorized
project--on time, if you are proposing zero dollars for Rural Water
construction?
Answer. Reclamation remains committed to the completion of the
Eastern New Mexico Water Supply Project. Reclamation has contributed
$364 million toward completion of the Project to date, and over $30
million has been allocated in FY 2024 and FY 2025. Additionally,
Reclamation has $92 million remaining in rural water construction
funding for which this project is eligible.
Currently under construction are Finished Water (FW) 1 and FW 3,
both of which are planned for completion in this fiscal year. The
remaining activities will complete the remaining pipelines and
facilities. These include: Texico Lateral, Elida Lateral, Raw Water
(RW) 1, RW2, RW3, the Water Treatment Plant, Caprock Booster Pump
Station, Intake Pump Station, Elida Pump Station, Caprock Storage Tank,
Ultimate Buildout work and delivery of power to facilities.
CONCLUSION OF HEARINGS
Senator Kennedy. Thank you for coming. We'll talk again.
We're probably going to have to start over with this budget.
Gentlemen, I'm not telling you anything that you don't know.
It's just not realistic and I support a lot of what Russ and my
friends at OMB are doing. But I just know the appetite for the
work that you all do and the necessity of it. So, I'm just
being realistic.
Thank you for coming. Take the rest of the day off.
[Laughter.]
[Whereupon, at 11:30 a.m., Wednesday, June 11, the hearings
were concluded, and the subcommittee was recessed, to reconvene
subject to the call of the Chair.]
LIST OF WITNESSES, COMMUNICATIONS, AND
PREPARED STATEMENTS
----------
Page
Baldwin, Senator Tammy, U.S. Senator From Wisconsin, Questions
Submitted by
Cameron, Mr. Scott J., Acting Assistant Secretary for Water and
Science, Bureau of Reclamation, Department of the Interior..... 80
Prepared Statement of........................................ 80
Questions Submitted to....................................... 102
Durbin, Senator Richard J., U.S. Senator From Illinois, Questions
Submitted by................................................... 67
Forsgren, Mr. D. Lee, Acting Assistant Secretary of the Army
(Civil Works), Department of Defense--Civil.................... 71
Prepared Statement of........................................ 76
Questions Submitted to....................................... 100
Summary Statement of......................................... 75
Graham, Lieutenant General William H. Jr., Chief of Engineers and
Commanding General, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Department of
Defense--Civil................................................. 77
Prepared Statement of........................................ 78
Questions Submitted to....................................... 102
Graham, Senator Lindsey, U.S. Senator From South Carolina,
Questions Submitted by......................................... 57
Heinrich, Senator Martin, U.S. Senator From New Mexico, Questions
Submitted by
Hyde-Smith, Senator Cindy, U.S. Senator From Mississippi,
Questions Submitted by
Kennedy, Senator John, U.S. Senator From Louisiana, Opening
Statement of
McConnell, Senator Mitch, U.S. Senator From Kentucky, Questions
Submitted by................................................... 56
Murray, Senator Patty, U.S. Senator From Washington:
Questions Submitted by....................................... 61
Statement of
Peters, Senator Gary C., U.S. Senator From Michigan, Questions
Submitted by................................................... 101
Rounds, Senator Mike, U.S. Senator From South Dakota, Questions
Submitted by................................................... 59
Wright, Hon. Christopher, Office of the Secretary, Department of
Energy......................................................... 1
Prepared Statement of........................................ 7
Questions Submitted to....................................... 56
Summary Statement of......................................... 5
SUBJECT INDEX
----------
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE--CIVIL
Department of the Army
Corps of Engineers--Civil
Page
Construction Program............................................. 79
Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program (FUSRAP)......... 79
Investigations Program........................................... 78
Operation and Maintenance (O&M) Program.......................... 79
Regulatory Program............................................... 79
Summary of FY 2026 Discretionary Request......................... 78
__________
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Office of the Secretary
Additional Committee Questions................................... 56
Alaska Projects.................................................. 24
Baseload for Grid Stability...................................... 19
Bonneville Power Authority Staffing.............................. 33
Critical Minerals................................................ 18
Department of Energy:
Budget....................................................... 13
Fiscal Year 2026 Budget...................................... 21
Project Review............................................... 26
Projects--Schools............................................ 32
Spend Plan................................................... 34
Federal Employees................................................ 12
Fiscal Year 2026:
Budget Request............................................... 31
President's Budget Request................................... 10
Grid:
Investments.................................................. 17
Reliability.................................................. 29
Security..................................................... 17
Upgrades..................................................... 25
Hydrogen Hubs.................................................... 23
Isotopes......................................................... 19
Loan Program Office.............................................. 53
Loans............................................................ 11
Nuclear:
Energy....................................................... 32
Power........................................................ 14
Reactors..................................................... 15
Priorities....................................................... 8
Research Funding for Universities................................ 22
Response to Letters.............................................. 35
Small Modular Reactors........................................... 28
Staffing at Department of Energy................................. 55
__________
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Reclamation
Additional Committee Questions................................... 100
Central Utah Project Completion Act.............................. 82
Colorado River Water............................................. 82
Prioritizing Western Water Deliveries for People and Agriculture. 81
Water & Related Resources Overview............................... 81
[all]