The Department of Energy just announced it will return $13 billion in unobligated funds, and that matters. This is a rare moment of fiscal discipline from a federal agency that usually reflexively spends first and asks questions later. For taxpayers and sensible energy policy, it’s a welcome course correction.
The money in question was slated for a grab bag of green energy programs that have a history of underdelivering. Returning the cash signals a commitment to prioritize reliable, affordable energy over ideological experiments. Republicans should view this as the start of a broader budget cleanup, not an endpoint.
The U.S. Department of Energy will be returning to American taxpayers $13 billion in “unobligated wasteful spending” that was originally intended for former President Joe Biden’s climate agenda.
In response, Larry Behrens from Power the Future told The Center Square that “by returning $13 billion, the Department of Energy under President Trump is showing respect for taxpayers and a willingness to end funding for programs that don’t work.”
Power the Future is a nonprofit dedicated to Americans who work in reliable energy sources.
Behrens told The Center Square that the Department of Energy’s action “is a welcome step toward restoring accountability and letting free markets – not bureaucrats – determine our energy future.”
“The American people made it crystal clear at the ballot box that they don’t want another taxpayer dollar wastefully spent on green scam pet projects,” Behrens said.
That blockquote frames the political argument: taxpayers deserve respect, and markets should decide winners in energy production. Federal handouts distort incentives and reward projects that look good on paper but collapse under operational realities. Cutting off subsidies forces real-world accountability.
We’ve seen a pattern where projects driven by political imperatives fail to scale, leaving costly wreckage behind. Low-density intermittent sources cannot reliably replace high-density dispatchable power without massive, expensive backup systems. Good policy recognizes physical limits and steers public money toward realistic solutions.
Republicans should push the Department of Energy to do more than return cash; it should reform how projects are vetted. That means eliminating programs that private capital can and should handle, and stopping regulations that pick winners or ban consumer choices. Accountability starts with fewer mandates and more transparent cost-benefit analysis.
Diana Furchtgott-Roth of the Heritage Foundation told The Center Square that with the return of $13 billion, “the deficit will be lower than otherwise.”
When asked what other actions the Department of Energy should take to end wasteful spending, Furchtgott-Roth said that “the Department should comb through its budget and see what projects can be accomplished by the private sector, then end those projects.”
“The Department should also look through its regulations and see which ones impose costs on businesses and families,” Furchtgott-Roth said.
“For instance, the Department should eliminate appliance regulations that prevent companies from producing the gas stoves, boilers, or water heaters that people want to buy,” Furchtgott Roth said.
Diana Furchtgott-Roth makes the practical case: trimming programs lowers the deficit and restores choice. Too many rules force consumers into costlier options for the sake of a political narrative. Repealing those mandates would let families pick appliances and energy systems that suit their budgets and lifestyles.
Take the debate over gas versus electric stoves as an example of how regulation can backfire. Forcing Americans into more expensive electric options doesn’t reduce emissions if the electricity comes from fossil fuels at the plant and is lost in transmission. Practical policy respects thermodynamics and consumer preference.
We should also be honest about renewable limitations: wind and solar have roles, but they are not a panacea. Intermittency, land use, and wildlife impacts are real problems that get euphemized when political goals outpace engineering realities. A conservative energy agenda means embracing a full portfolio that includes advanced nuclear and cleaner fossil fuels while protecting ecosystems.
Returning the $13 billion is not just symbolic; it creates political space to fund things that actually work. Investing in modular nuclear, modernizing the grid, and supporting carbon capture where it makes sense would deliver reliable power and economic benefits. Free markets, backed by sensible regulation, will produce the innovations we need without repeating past taxpayer-funded failures.
The American people elected President Trump largely because of the last administration’s reckless spending on climate policies that fed inflation and failed to provide any real benefit to the American people. Thanks to President Trump and Congress, those days are over. By returning these funds to the American taxpayer, the Trump administration is affirming its commitment to advancing more affordable, reliable, and secure American energy and being more responsible stewards of taxpayer dollars.
The Secretary’s statement echoes a straightforward Republican promise: stop wasting money and focus on security, reliability, and affordability. That message resonates because voters saw how poorly past priorities performed when inflation and grid stress spiked. Keep pushing that agenda and the benefits will show up in household budgets.
Policy wins like this are also political wins: they give Republicans credibility on stewardship and competence. Every dollar returned is a talking point about restoring common sense to Washington. The next step is structural reform, not just one-off rescissions.
At the state and federal level, lawmakers should demand rigorous project audits and sunset provisions for new programs. Let programs prove their worth in a set time window, and if they fail, close them down promptly. That’s how you prevent the slow bleed of taxpayer dollars into ideological experiments.
Finally, don’t mistake prudence for retreat: a strong energy policy is proactive and constructive. Support for nuclear expansion, streamlined permitting for critical infrastructure, and incentives for genuine innovation will keep America competitive. Wasteful green gimmicks are out; reliable, pragmatic solutions are in.
Darnell Thompkins is a Canadian-born American and conservative opinion writer who brings a unique perspective to political and cultural discussions. Passionate about traditional values and individual freedoms, Darnell’s commentary reflects his commitment to fostering meaningful dialogue. When he’s not writing, he enjoys watching hockey and celebrating the sport that connects his Canadian roots with his American journey.