Current:Home > StocksEthermac Exchange-ARPA-E on Track to Boost U.S. Energy, Report Says. Trump Wants to Nix It. -Blueprint Money Mastery
Ethermac Exchange-ARPA-E on Track to Boost U.S. Energy, Report Says. Trump Wants to Nix It.
Rekubit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-07 11:00:59
The Ethermac Exchangegovernment’s incubator for financially risky innovations that have the potential to transform the U.S. energy sector is on track and fulfilling its mission, according to a new, congressionally mandated review. The findings come on the heels of the Trump administration’s proposal to cut the program’s budget by 93 percent.
Congress created ARPA-E—Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy—in 2007 to research new energy technologies and help usher them to market. It has funded advances in biofuels, advanced batteries and clean-car technology, among other areas.
The Trump administration argued in its budget proposal in March that the “private sector is better positioned to advance disruptive energy research and development and to commercialize innovative technologies.”
But Tuesday’s assessment by the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine makes a different case, saying, in effect, that private industry can’t afford the same kind of risk or enable the same kind of culture that leads to ground-breaking developments.
The assessment concluded that ARPA-E is doing what it set out to do and is not in need of reform, as some critics have suggested. Its authors pointed out that the program is intended to fund projects that can take years or decades to come to fruition.
“It is too early to expect the revolution of the world and energy,” said Dan Mote, chairperson of the study committee and president of the National Academy of Engineering. “But the fact is it is alive and well and moving forward in the right direction.”
The program was modeled on DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Project Agency), the government research engine that developed the internet. Like DARPA, the project’s goal is to identify promising research that private industry can’t afford or won’t take on. But unlike DARPA, the program’s activities are carried out in public view. Under a mandate from Congress, ARPA-E has to be reviewed every six years.
Its progress is especially remarkable, the report’s authors say, given the budget constraints the program faces. ARPA-E costs about $300 million a year — a figure that industry leaders have said should be closer to $1 billion at least. (The program was created during the Bush administration as part of the America COMPETES Act, but wasn’t funded until 2009.) In a 2015 report, the American Energy Innovation Council, which counts Bill Gates among its leading executives, said that the government spends less on energy research than Americans spend on potato and tortilla chips.
Tuesday’s report found that ARPA-E’s unique structure—helmed by new program directors who rotate in every three years—was a key to its momentum. Its ability to take risks, the study committee argues, distinguishes it from other funding programs, including in the private sector.
“One of the strengths is its focus on funding high-risk, potentially transformative technologies and overlooked off-roadmap opportunities pursued by either private forms or other funding agencies including other programs and offices in the DOE (Department of Energy),” said Louis Schick, a study committee member and co-founder of New World Capital, a private equity firm that invests in clean technology.
The renewable energy industry, which has expressed concerns about Trump’s proposed cuts, said the report underscores ARPA-E’s role in developing breakthrough technologies.
“We don’t know yet whether ARPA-E will unlock a game-changing energy technology like it’s cousin DARPA famously did with the internet, but the report clearly outlines how ARPA-E is well-structured for success going forward,” said Scott Clausen, policy and research manager at the American Council on Renewable Energy. “There is no denying that this program fills a critical void in funding high-risk, high-reward research—an essential ingredient for our overall economic competitiveness.”
The review’s authors were careful to make clear that ARPA-E wasn’t pursuing overly risky projects on the taxpayer dime.
“It’s not a failure when you stop when you learn it can’t be done,” Schick said. “It’s a failure if you keep going.”
veryGood! (492)
Related
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Last reactor shut down at Ukraine's largest nuclear plant as fighting, flooding continues
- Sophia Culpo Moves Out of Home She Shared With Ex Braxton Berrios After Breakup
- Apple 24-Hour Flash Deal: Save $481 on a MacBook Air Laptop Bundle
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Putin says Russia will deploy nuclear weapons in Belarus, Ukraine's neighbor to the north, in early July
- Gabrielle Union Has Never Felt More Connected to Anyone Than Her and Dwyane Wade's Daughter Zaya
- On trip to China, Blinken to raise cases of wrongfully detained Americans with Chinese
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Controversial Influencer Andrew Tate and Brother Tristan Released From Romanian Jail
Ranking
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Australian Scott White gets 9 years in prison for punching gay American Scott Johnson off Sydney cliff in 1988
- Here's the Truth About Britney Spears and Sam Asghari's Relationship Status
- Exercising in bad air quality can lead to negative health effects. Here's what to know.
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Tackling 'Energy Justice' Requires Better Data. These Researchers Are On It
- Extreme Heat Is Worse For Low-Income, Nonwhite Americans, A New Study Shows
- CMT Music Awards 2023 Red Carpet Fashion: See Every Look as the Stars Arrive
Recommendation
Intellectuals vs. The Internet
One reporter's lonely mission to keep facts flowing in China, where it's hard now to get real news
Key takeaways from Antony Blinken's visit to China
Jamie Lee Curtis' Tribute to Daughter Ruby Is Everything on Transgender Day of Visibility
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Rain, surge and wind: How to understand your hurricane risk
Democrats' Budget Plan Pushes A Shift To Clean Energy. Here's How It Would Work
Tom Brady's Latest Outing With His and Gisele Bündchen's Kids Is a Work of Art