The Trump Administration continues to revise, restructure, and cancel billions of U.S. dollars of Biden-era loans and funding commitments to clean energy projects as the United States shifted its policy to supporting fossil fuels and nuclear power as part of its energy dominance agenda.
In the latest instalment of canceled or revised funding, the Department of Energy this week announced that the Office of Energy Dominance Financing (EDF), previously known as the Loan Programs Office (LPO), is restructuring, revising, or eliminating more than $83 billion in what it called “Green New Scam” loans and conditional commitments from the Biden-era loan portfolio.
EDF has reviewed in the past year each borrower of these funds “to ensure loans were a responsible investment of taxpayer dollars and aligned with the Administration’s priorities,” the Department of Energy said.
EDF is reforming the office to more responsibly steward taxpayer dollars and support financing opportunities that accelerate the deployment of affordable, reliable, and secure American energy.
For the Trump Administration, affordable, reliable, and secure energy means fossil fuels and nuclear power, and excludes solar and wind capacity projects.
The Biden Administration has committed over $104 billion in financing, of which $85 billion was closed or committed between Election Day 2024 and Inauguration Day 2025, DOE said.
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“We found more dollars were rushed out the door of the Loan Programs Office in the final months of the Biden Administration than had been disbursed in over fifteen years,” Energy Secretary Chris Wright said.
Out of the $104 billion in Biden-era principal loan obligations, EDF has completed or is in the process of de-obligating over $29.9 billion (about 29%) and has completed or is in the process of revising another $53.6 billion (approximately 51%) of this total.
EDF has also eliminated about $9.5 billion in government-subsidized, intermittent wind and solar projects, and, where possible, replacing those projects with natural gas and nuclear uprates that provide more affordable and reliable energy, DOE said.
The financing vehicle now has more than $289 billion in available loan authority, and the restructuring of the priorities of the loan office means that EDF will be backing six energy sectors. These are nuclear energy; coal, oil, gas, and hydrocarbons; critical materials and minerals; geothermal energy; grid and transmission; and manufacturing and transportation.
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