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DOE Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) Appropriations, FY2026

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DOE Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) Appropriations, FY2026
Updated December 18, 2025January 20, 2026 (IF13118)

The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE's) Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) is responsible for renewable energy and end-use energy efficiency technology development. Other activities include issuing grants for home energy efficiency and state energy planning, establishing minimum energy conservation standards for appliances and equipment, and providing technical support.

EERE collaborates with industry, academia, national laboratories, and others to conduct and support research, development, demonstration, and deployment activities. EERE also manages programs that support state and local governments, tribes, and schools. EERE oversees and supports the research and infrastructure of the National Laboratory of the Rockies (formerly National Renewable Energy Laboratory), including its research and development of technologies for renewable energy and energy efficiency.

EERE Appropriations

EERE generally receives funding throughis generally funded by the annual Energy and Water Development and Related Agencies (EWD) appropriations bill. The Full-Year Continuing Appropriations and Extensions Act, 2025 (P.L. 119-4) was signed by President Trump on March 15, 2025, providing annual appropriations for FY2025 at the FY2024 level for nearly all accounts, or $3.460 billion for EERE (Division D of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024; P.L. 118-42).

In addition, EERE received funding through the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA; P.L. 117-58). IIJA provided a total of $16.264 billion in additional emergency appropriations for EERE, of which $1.945 billion is for FY2026 (see Table 1).

EERE also received $17.962 billion in additional funding through P.L. 117-169 (known as the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, or IRA) in FY2022, expiring at the end of FY2026, FY2027, FY2029, or FY2031, depending on the provision. (Prior year funding; not shown in Table 1.)

Executive Branch Actions

For FY2026, the Trump Administration requested $888 million for EERE, a 74.3% decrease versus FY2025 enacted of $3.460 billion. The FY2026 request also proposed the creation of a new account of $15 million, additional to the EERE money, corresponding to activities managed by the Under Secretary for Infrastructure (designated as "S3" in the DOE organization)—a position DOE created in FY2023. The proposed account is the Office of Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains (MESC), whose activities have been funded within the EERE account. The total request for FY2026, including the proposed MESC account, was $903 million. Program direction for the EERE and MESC accounts in the FY2026 budget request comprised 20.4% of the total request.

funding one particular EERE program, Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains (MESC), at $15 million in a new appropriations account, in addition to the EERE money.

Overall, DOE's stated goal for EERE funding is to "advance energy dominance." The President's budget request states that EERE will support work to repeal energy efficiency standards. The request includes goals for domestic supply chains of critical materials and components, modernization of the electric grid, promoting affordability and consumer choice in home appliances, research focused on key outcomes related to energy affordability, and other purposes.

The President's budget request for FY2026 proposes appropriationappropriations bill language to enact rescissions of $2.315 billion of the IIJA-appropriated funds allocated to EERE. On November 20, 2025, DOE reorganized EERE's functionfunctions into a new Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation.

Legislative Actions

The House passed H.R. 4553 (119th Congress), the Energy and Water Development and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2026, on September 4, 2025. The bill would fund EERE at $1.83 billion, keeping MESC activities within EERE. H.Rept. 119-213 would, per Section 102 of H.R. 4553A proposed House-Senate compromise that includes FY2026 EERE appropriations was introduced January 6, 2026 (H.R. 6938, the Commerce, Justice, Science; Energy and Water Development; and Interior and Environment Appropriations Act, 2026) and passed the House on January 8, 2026, and the Senate on January 15, 2026. A January 5, 2026, press release from the House Appropriations Committee described the bill as "conferenced legislation" and "bipartisan, bicameral." The bill would fund EERE at $3.1 billion, applying a transfer of $1.150 billion in unobligated balances appropriated in IIJA, as directed in Section 311(c) of Division B, for a net EERE appropriation of $1.950 billion. The funds to be transferred from IIJA include $393.9 million in EERE appropriations from Division J of IIJA, among other amounts from other DOE offices. The bill would not fund MESC as a separate account as in the President's request. The draft explanatory statement for Division B of H.R. 6938 would, per Section 104 of the bill, allocate monies to the accounts and subaccounts as shown in Table 1. Neither the House bill nor the House reportdraft explanatory statement acted on the President's request to rescind monies from IIJA. Section 313 of H.R. 4553 would require that $672.7 million of certain unobligated amounts appropriated in IIJA—Sections 40208, 40314 (not all of which was appropriated to EERE), 40511(a), and 40541—be transferred to nuclear energy programs. The bill does not specify how the transfer is to be apportioned from the IIJA sections.

Previously, on September 4, 2025, the House had passed H.R. 4553, the Energy and Water Development and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2026, which would have funded EERE at $1.83 billion, keeping MESC activities within EERE. The House-passed bill was placed on the legislative calendar in the Senate on September 10, 2025. (Not shown in Table 1.)

In the Senate, Title III of S. 3293, the Energy and Water Development and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2026, referred to the Committee on Appropriations on December 1, 2025, specifies—would have specified $3.287 billion in the EERE account, $1.0590598 billion of which iswould have been a transfer of amounts previously appropriated in IIJA to carry out Section 40308, Regional Direct Air Capture Hubs.

Section 50402 of the FY2025 budget reconciliation measure (P.L. 119-21) rescinds unobligated balances for State-Based Home Energy Efficiency Contractor Training Grants (IRA §50123, $200 million S. 3293 also would have specified $19.0 million for MESC as a separate account. (Not shown in Table 1).

Table 1. Appropriations: EERE Account and DOE-Proposedand MESC Accounts, FY2025 and FY2026

(in millions of dollars)

15.0

.0

Account (in italics) and Program Activitya

FY2025
IIJA Enactedb

FY2025 Annual Enacted

FY2026
IIJA Enactedb

FY2026 Request

FY2026
House Passed Bill

FY2026 Senate Introduced Bill

H.R. 6938Final

EERE, Total

total budget authority

1,945.0

3,460.0

1,945.0

888.0

1,830.0

3,287.0c

3,100.0

Sustainable Transportation

and Fuels

1,440.0

581.7

1,440.0

95.0

411.0

787802.0

Vehicle Technologies

1,240.0d

c

240.0

1,240.0d

c

25.0

215.0

426397.0

Bioenergy Technologies

305.0

70.0

146.0

265245.0

Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Technologies

200.0

36.7

200.0

50.0

96160.0

Renewable Energy

969.6

240.0

395.0

814690.0

Solar Energy

41.9

115.0

221220.0

Wind Energy

29.8

55.0

122100.0

Water Power

300.0

90.0

100.0

220.0

Geothermal Technologies

487.9

150.0

125.0

251150.0

Renewable Energy Grid Integration

110.0

Energy Efficiency

Buildings and Industry

505.0

921.6

505.0

170.0

322.0

768678.0

Advanced Manufacturing

250.0e

d

774.0

250.0e

d

150.0

222.0f

453.0g

390.0e

Building Technologies

255.0h

f

147.6

255.0h

f

20.0

100.0

315288.0

State and Community Energy Programs

432.1

250435.0

465.0

Weatherization

366.0

195.0

375369.0

State Energy Program

66.0

5566.0

90.0i

Local Government Energy Program

0.1

Energy Future Grants

Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains

19.0

1517.0

Federal Energy Management Program

43.0

15.0

3925.0

Corporate Support

493.0

383.0

442453.0

Transfers of unobligated IIJA balances to EERE

.0

414.0

Unallocated Reductions

-201,150.0

MESC

SCEP

MESC

15.0

19.0

FEMP

Total, all the above accounts

all accounts, net of transfers to EERE

1,945.0b

3,460.0

1,945.0b

903.0

1,830.0

3,306950.0

Sources: P.L. 117-58 (Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act; IIJA); P.L. 119-4; DOE FY2026 Congressional Justification, DOE/CF-0215, vol. 4; H.R. 4553 (119th Congress); H.Rept. 119-213; S. 3293 (as introduced)6938 and draft bill report, Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development (dated November 24, 2025)draft explanatory statement for Division B; and DOE FY2026 Budget Justification: Statistical Tables.

Notes: Columns may not sum due to rounding. EERE = Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy; SCEP = Office of State and Community Energy Programs; MESC = Office of Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains; and FEMP = Federal Energy Management Program. See text regarding rescissions of IIJA funding proposed in the President's Budget Request FY2026.

a. Subaccount names in bold are as given in draft explanatory statement for Division B of H.R. 6938H.Rept. 119-213.

b. The placement of IIJA funding in the various rowssubaccounts (rows) follows DOE's FY2023 Congressional Budget Request, DOE/CF-0184, vol. 4. The total IIJA funding for EERE was not implemented by EERE in every case. See other notes to this table.

c. Includes $1,059 million transferred from amounts previously appropriated in IIJA Division J Title III.

d. Of this amount, $1,200 million of funding is being executed in MESC: Battery Material Processing Grants (IIJA §40207(b)) and Battery Manufacturing and Recycling Grants (IIJA §40207(c)).

ed. Of this amount, $100 million is for IIJA §40314 activities, which DOE calls the Clean Hydrogen Manufacturing Recycling RD&D Program, and $150 million is being executed within MESC in the Advanced Energy Manufacturing and Recycling Grant Program (IIJA §40209).

fe. Equals the sum of two lines in draft explanatory statement for Division B of H.R. 6938. Equals the sum of two lines in H.Rept. 119-213: Advanced Materials and Manufacturing Technologies (recommendation of $117 million) and Industrial Technologies Program (recommendation of $105 million).

g. Equals the sum of two lines in the draft report of the Energy and Water Development Act, 2026: Advanced Materials and Manufacturing Technologies (recommendation of $220185 million) and Industrial Technologies Program (recommendation of $233205 million).

hf. Of this amount, $100 million is being executed in SCEPthe Office of State and Community Energy Programs as Energy Efficiency Improvements and Renewable Improvements at Public School Facilities (some of which H.R. 4553 would transfer out of EERE), and a further $110 million in MESC as (1) Industrial Research and Assessment Centers (IRACs), authorized in Section 457(b)-(h) of the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (EISA; P.L. 110-140); and (2) Implementation Grants for IRACs, authorized in Section 457(i) of EISA—both as amended by IIJA §40521.

i. Equals the sum of two lines in the Senate Appropriations Committee draft report for the Energy and Water Development Act, 2026: State Energy Program (recommendation of $75 million) and Program Direction – State and Community Energy Programs (recommendation of $15 million).