WASHINGTON, D.C. ― “The Trump administration will have a 180-degree opposite view of energy and climate issues than the previous administration,” Lou Hrkman, acting assistant secretary at the U.S. Department of Energy, told the opening session at the National Association of State Energy Officials’ Energy Policy Outlook Conference on Feb. 5.
And he added, “From my standpoint, thank goodness!”
Hrkman served as DOE deputy assistant secretary for advanced energy systems and carbon management in the first Trump administration, and this time around is heading the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy. Facing a ballroom full of state energy officials, he outlined what that policy U-turn will mean with newly confirmed Energy Secretary Chris Wright, a fossil fuel executive, leading the department.
Hrkman agrees with his new boss’s much-publicized view that “there is not an energy transition.” Citing figures from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, Hrkman said that by 2050, “fossil fuels will continue to provide 80 to 85% of energy use worldwide, just about the same percentage as it is now. Renewables are additive; they are not replacing fossil fuels.”
He also endorsed Wright’s belief that “climate change [is] a challenge, but ending world energy poverty is a more important goal.”
Hrkman’s remarks received respectful, if not enthusiastic applause from an audience of state officials who are now waiting to see if they will receive the billions in federal dollars they were awarded for a range of clean energy projects funded through the Inflation Reduction Act and Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.
The Office of Management and Budget issued and then quickly rescinded a funding freeze days before the NASEO event, followed by a restraining order issued by the U.S. District Court in D.C. Still, ongoing uncertainty provided the background buzz at the conference. (See Judge Issues Restraining Order on Trump Admin over Funding Pause.)
“There’s a lot of angst at the state level, and that’s red, blue and purple across the board,” said California Energy Commissioner Andrew McAllister, a past president of NASEO. “These monies, many of them, have been contracted already. They’re obligated. We have contractors ready to spend the money, in some cases, already spending the money and putting programs together and pushing out rebates to American citizens. And so, I think it’s a shame if that stops.”
While not mentioning solar, wind or storage, Hrkman called for a “best-of-the-above” approach, which puts fossil fuels first as critical to “American civilization. … There is no analysis by any credible source or government organization that concludes net zero will be achieved by 2050; not here in the U.S., not in your states, not anywhere in the world.”
“Net zero can only be achieved when technology advances,” he said. “Over time it is accepted by the public. The new technology is affordable, and market forces, not government mandates lead the way.” A similar time-and-technology approach will eventually bring down greenhouse gas emissions, he said.
The technologies DOE will prioritize going forward, besides fossil fuels, will be nuclear, geothermal and fusion energy, he said, while building out supply chains for critical mineral mining and refining.
He also signaled a rollback of energy efficiency standards for home appliances set by Biden’s DOE, arguing that consumer choice and commonsense goals would provide “real energy savings, [and] dollars in real pockets for real consumers.”
On permitting reform, Hrkman said it is “desperately” needed but should not be used “as a smoke screen to allow socialized costs of new transmission for renewable energy sources. Ratepayers in the states and cities that use that energy should pay the full cost for transmission, just like it is today.”
Political Rhetoric, Physical Reality
On his first day in office on Feb. 5, Wright backed up Hrkman with a series of orders aimed at implementing President Donald Trump’s Jan. 20 executive order on Unleashing American Energy, beginning with a blanket refutation of cutting greenhouse gas emissions to net zero as a long-term U.S. goal.
Calling net zero too expensive and ineffective in cutting emissions, Wright said, “going forward, the department’s goal will be to unleash the great abundance of American energy required to power modern life and to achieve a durable state of American energy dominance.”
He also pledged a thorough review of DOE’s research and development activities to prioritize “true technological breakthroughs ― such as nuclear fusion, high-performance computing, quantum computing and AI ― to maintain America’s global competitiveness. …
“The long-awaited American nuclear renaissance must launch during President Trump’s administration,” he said. “The department will work diligently and creatively to enable the rapid deployment and export of next-generation nuclear technology.”
Other priorities include refilling the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve; developing more baseload, dispatchable resources to improve grid security; and, of course, permitting reform.
Arguing against Trump’s attack on clean energy and climate action, Rep. Doris Matsui (D-Calif.) countered that “our energy system and climate change are inextricably linked. Many people want to pretend climate change isn’t happening. The physical reality doesn’t bend to political rhetoric.
“We must reduce emissions as quickly and rapidly as possible while still improving grid reliability, reducing energy costs and meeting increasing energy demands.”
Matsui called the challenges ahead “a perfect storm, unlike anything we faced before,” urging state officials to “get serious about working together.”
“We must chart a path forward that is both forward-looking and feasible,” she said. “We are not on that path. Banning wind energy, blocking solar on federal lands, tariffs on energy imports and critical grid equipment, this is not going to make energy cheaper. This is not going to make energy more abundant or more reliable.”
Grid-enhancing technologies and demand flexibility provided by distributed energy technologies such as virtual power plants should not be partisan issues, she said.
“It’s common sense that we need more capacity to transfer energy where it’s needed most,” she said. “We should embrace a more flexible, more dynamic energy paradigm.”
Echoing Matsui, McAllister said states will have to work with the federal government and compromise will be key.
Hrkman’s speech provided some clarity for state officials at the conference, McAllister said. “We’re just hearing exactly what we needed to hear and to understand the directions the new administration is proposing.”
While California has the resources to ride out a funding pause and keep some of its IRA-funded clean energy projects “on life support” at least for a while, McAllister acknowledged that other states might not have the same options.
He sees the federal focus on reliability, affordability, jobs and economic development as a starting point where federal and state energy officials might work together. “There’s plenty of palette for us to paint with,” he said.
“When the smoke clears and we figure out what the actual, sort of substantive daily priorities are going to be for the staff at the Department of Energy, and what initiatives they’re actually going to be working on — I don’t really want to speculate — but I feel like there’s a lot that we can do together, and I hope that we do.”