What Does the U.S. Department of Energy Do for Us?
The federal Department of Energy (DOE) was created in 1977 but traces its origins back to the Manhattan Project to develop the atomic bomb during World War II. After the war, those involved realized that all their programs involved “Big Science,” which required multi-billion-dollar particle accelerators and other research projects and equipment that are difficult for private companies to fund. In the 1970s, the Arab oil embargo provided another reason for a Department of Energy to bring together all the various government energy-related projects. Today the Department’s webpage states its mission as “to ensure America’s security and prosperity by addressing its energy, environmental and nuclear challenges through transformative science and technology solutions.”
In reality, the Department of Energy has little to do with generating or distributing energy, other than some research and the protection of the national electrical grid. Currently the Department is under the leadership of Secretary Rick Perry, former governor of Texas and big defender of the fossil fuel industry. The Department has a $30 billion budget and 115,000 employees across the United States. About one-half of the budget is spent on maintaining and guarding the U.S. nuclear arsenal. $2 billion is spent on searching for weapons grade plutonium and uranium at loose in the world to prevent terrorists from getting it. According to Michael Lewis, in his book The Fifth Risk, between 2010 and 2018, the DOE collected enough weapons grade material for 160 nuclear bombs. The DOE is also responsible for ensuring that nuclear weapons are not lost, stolen, or exploded accidentally. The Department trains all the international atomic-energy inspectors as well. In 2005 Congress appropriated $70 million to the DOE to fund a loan program to businesses that develop new energy technologies. According to Lewis, an example of the benefits of these loans is the reduction of utility scale solar energy from 27cents/kilowatt hour to 7cents.
In early March of this year the DOE announced $100 million for Small Business Innovation and Technology Funding. These are Phase II grants and recipients of Phase I grants are eligible to reapply. In announcing the program Secretary Perry stated “Small businesses are the backbone of the American economy. Providing small businesses with greater opportunities to enhance science and technology research and development strengthens the economic security of our entire country.”
Sources:
Michael Lewis, The Fifth Risk. W.W. Norton & Co., 2018
Department of Energy, https://www.energy.gov/about-us
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