June 18, 2025
🛫 Happy Wednesday! Today the Senate departs for Juneteenth recess — but not before taking a hard look at DOE's budget blueprint.
💻 Barring breaking news, we'll be back in your inbox Tuesday.
🎶 Today's last song comes from Larry Gasteiger, executive director of Wires: "Times Like These" by the Foo Fighters.
1 big thing: Wind, solar, batteries and hydrogen lack the Wright stuff
Energy Secretary Chris Wright today panned subsidies for wind, solar, batteries, and hydrogen to skeptical Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee Democrats.
Why it matters: The Democrats took a sharper tone in Wright's first appearance at the committee since he was handily confirmed in a bipartisan vote.
What he's saying: Wright argued that the intermittent production of wind and solar has made the grid less reliable and more expensive. Subsidies for them are "the most offensive," he said.
- Solar, in particular, "has been subsidized for a quarter of a century and it should compete on its own," Wright said.
- But Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto noted that "oil and gas have had subsidies for decades, and they will continue to have subsidies for decades."
Zoom in: Wright also threw cold water on hydrogen as Senate Republicans proposed ending the 45V production tax credit at the end of 2025 and as DOE targets awards to regional hydrogen hubs.
- "It's tough with the math to see how, in the long term, it becomes a meaningful commercial energy source," Wright told Sen. Maria Cantwell of Washington state, home to a Pacific Northwest hydrogen hub.
The other side: Democrats pressed Wright on project cancellations they say undermine President Trump's "energy dominance" goal.
- Sen. Martin Heinrich, the panel's ranking Democrat, said the agency's recent cancellation of awards "crosses into impoundment territory and is certainly a breach of contract."
- "Actions like these will severely damage our country's ability to lead in developing and commercializing next-generation technologies, while ceding ground to our competitors," Heinrich said.
- Cortez Masto also questioned the legal authority to "roll back congressionally approved funds for this enacted program."
Wright responded that the DOE used the contract's cancellation clauses because "an evaluation showed that the projects, at the end, were not viable. There's no point in building a bridge to nowhere."
- The agency, he said, is reviewing about 500 Biden-era projects and discussing whether they can be changed to become viable.
Driving the news: Wright said the DOE will announce a solicitation today for three new small modular reactors to produce power by July 4, 2026 — an ambitious goal.
- Wright blamed permitting delays and "obstructionist" Nuclear Regulatory Commission rules for why the industry stopped building reactors for several decades.
- "The system within the NRC isn't necessarily calibrated to maximize" reactor deployment, said ENR Chair Mike Lee.
- The DOE is working with the Defense Department to implement nuclear energy executive orders, which in part envision a "total and complete reform of NRC culture."
Reality check: Nuclear power observers say soaring costs are far more to blame for reactor delays than NRC policies.
What's next: Wright implored the Senate to confirm more DOE nominees.
- "I've got 10 people that have gone through your committee that are sitting there," he said, adding that he "desperately" needs more staff.
2. Catch me up: People on the move
Let's catch up on people who've gotten new jobs.
Edward Maibach stepped down as director of the Center for Climate Change Communication at George Mason University after 18 years. His longtime colleague John Kotcher is now interim director.
Giulia Siccardo joined Quinbrook Infrastructure Partners' investment team as managing director and head of North America. Siccardo previously was director of the DOE's Office of Manufacturing and Energy Supply Chains.
Anna Siefken joined the Long Duration Energy Storage Council as the North America policy & markets lead after three years at DOE.
Cheryl Lombard announced a new position as founder and president of Lombard Natural Capitol Consulting after most recently working at ClearPath.
Noel Black announced he's departing Southern Company after 31 years with the utility. He's joining Algonquin Power & Utilities as chief regulatory and external affairs officer.
✅ Thank you for reading Axios Pro Policy, and thanks to editors Chuck McCutcheon and David Nather and copy editor Brad Bonhall.
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