On April 9, 2021, President Joe Biden sent a preliminary outline of his budget request for Fiscal Year 2022 to Congress.[1] The $1.52 trillion budget request included new climate change investments, totaling more than $14 billion more compared to FY2021, across nearly all agencies. This is the first time that a budget request has detailed funding of specific climate programs. The administration is requesting a 10.2% increase to $46.1 billion for the Department of Energy (DOE), a 21.3% increase to $11.2 billion for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and a 16.3% increase to $17.4 billion for the Department of the Interior (DOI). At the DOE, funding for clean energy programs includes $1.9 billion to support the development of a new energy efficiency and clean electricity standard, provide local grants to incentivize clean energy workforce support, and support the development of streamlined transmission. For the EPA, funding requested by the administration includes $110 million to restore EPA staff capacity to pre-Trump administration levels and $1.8 billion in programs to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Biden’s budget request for the DOI includes $450 million to remediate orphaned oil and gas wells, remediate mining sites, and develop new jobs.
Proposed clean energy spending in other agencies includes $6.5 billion to the Department of Agriculture to spur rural clean energy projects and $300 million to the General Services Administration to electrify its vehicle fleet. The budget request follows the April 2021 release of the administration’s $2 trillion infrastructure plan, which proposed a federal clean electricity standard[2] and expanding clean energy tax credits. Both the budget request and the infrastructure plan are intended to put the U.S. on a path to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050.
[1] https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/FY2022-Discretionary-Request.pdf
[2] A clean electricity standard requires a percentage of retail electricity sales to come from low- and zero-carbon electricity sources. The share of clean electricity typically increases with time. Clean electricity standards are similar to renewable portfolio standards, which require that a certain percentage comes from renewable sources.