ACEEE'S GRAPEVINE ONLINE
February 16, 2005
BUSH EFFICIENCY BUDGET CONTINUES SLOW BLEEDING
As has been the case in recent years, the Administration's FY 2006
budget request, released February 7, continues to cut funding for
energy efficiency. Overall funding would drop from $868 million
in FY 2005 to $847 million in FY 2006. While this 2.5% cut may appear
modest, it reflects a 15% cut from FY 2002 levels, after inflation,
and masks deeper cuts in several key programs, including:
- Appliance
standardscut 19%
- Industries
of the Future (Specific)cut 42%
- Emerging
Technologies (Buildings)cut 19%
- Clean Citiescut
39%
- Advanced
Combustion Enginecut 17%
EPA's Energy Star funding level is not yet known, as that program
is not a line item in the budget, but EPA's overall budget is down
by about 6%, so pressure to cut across the board is strong.
ACEEE research has
made clear that energy efficiency is the nation's only real option
for moderating natural gas prices in the next five years. While
the energy bill contains some promising efficiency provisions, they
will for the most part take several years to have an effect. DOE
and EPA deployment programs, which are already active in the market,
can have an immediate effect with increased funding. That's why
it's important for Congress to raise the ante on the administration's
request.
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