/year, each equal to /year) in Washington State. In the early days of the Republic, energy policy allowed free use of standing
timber for heating and industry. Wind and water provided energy for tasks such as milling grain. In the 19th century, coal became widely used. Whales were rendered into
lamp oil.
Coal gas was
fractionated for use as lighting and
town gas. Natural gas was first used in America for lighting in 1816. Since then, natural gas has grown in importance, especially for electricity generation. US natural gas production peaked in 1973, and the price has risen significantly since then.
Coal provided the bulk of US energy needs well into the 20th century. Most urban homes had a coal bin and a coal-fired furnace. Over the years these were replaced with oil furnaces that were easier and safer to operate. From the early 1940s, the
US government and the oil industry entered into a mutually beneficial collaboration to control global oil resources. By 1950,
oil consumption exceeded that of coal. Abundant oil in California, Texas, Oklahoma, as well as in Canada and Mexico, coupled with its low cost, ease of transportation, high
energy density, and use in
internal combustion engines, led to its increasing use. As oil imports increased,
US foreign policy was drawn into
Middle Eastern politics, seeking to maintain a steady supply via actions such as protecting
Persian Gulf sea lanes.
Hydroelectricity was the basis of
Nikola Tesla's introduction of the US electricity grid, which started at
Niagara Falls, New York, in 1883. Electricity generated by major dams, such as the
TVA Project,
Grand Coulee Dam and
Hoover Dam, still produce some of the cheapest ($0.08/kWh) electricity. Rural electrification strung
power lines to many more areas. A
National Maximum Speed Limit of 55 mph (88 km/h) was imposed in 1974 (and repealed in 1995) to help reduce energy consumption.
Corporate Average Fuel Economy (aka CAFE) standards were enacted in 1975 and progressively tightened over time to compel manufacturers to improve vehicle mileage. Year-round
Daylight Saving Time was imposed in 1974 and repealed in 1975. The United States
Strategic Petroleum Reserve was created in 1975. The
Weatherization Assistance Program was enacted in 1977. On average, low-cost
weatherization reduces heating bills by 31% and overall energy bills by $358 per year at 2012 prices. Increased energy efficiency and weatherization spending has a high
return on investment. On August 4, 1977, President
Jimmy Carter signed into law
The Department of Energy Organization Act of 1977 (), which created the
United States Department of Energy (DOE). The new agency, which began operations on October 1, 1977, consolidated the
Federal Energy Administration, the
Energy Research and Development Administration, the
Federal Power Commission, and programs of various other agencies. Former Secretary of Defense
James Schlesinger, who served under Presidents Nixon and Ford during the
Vietnam War, was appointed as its first secretary. On June 30, 1980, Congress passed the
Energy Security Act, which reauthorized the
Defense Production Act of 1950 and enabled it to cover domestic energy supplies. It also obligated the federal government to promote and reform the
Strategic Petroleum Reserve,
biofuels,
geothermal power,
acid rain prevention,
solar power, and
synthetic fuel commercialization. The Defense Production Act was further reauthorized in 2009, with modifications requiring the federal government to promote renewable energy, energy efficiency, and improved grid and grid storage installations with its defense procurements. The
federal government provided substantially larger
subsidies to fossil fuels than to renewables in the 2002–2008 period. Subsidies to
fossil fuels totaled approximately $72 billion, a direct cost to taxpayers, over the study period. Subsidies for renewable fuels totaled $29 billion over the same period, this was also a direct cost to taxpayers. In some cases, the US used energy policy to pursue other international goals.
Richard Heinberg claimed that a declassified
CIA document showed that, during the
Reagan administration, the US used oil prices as leverage against the
Soviet Union economy by working with Saudi Arabia to keep oil prices low, thus decreasing the value of the USSR's petroleum export industry. The 2005
Energy Policy Act (EPA) addressed (1) energy efficiency; (2) renewable energy; (3) oil and gas; (4) coal; (5) tribal energy; (6) nuclear matters; (7) vehicles and motor fuels, including ethanol; (8) hydrogen; (9) electricity; (10) energy tax incentives; (11) hydropower and geothermal energy; and (12) climate change technology. The Act also started the Department of Energy's
Loan Guarantee Program. Due in part to the design of the tax credits, the final amount of energy spending and incentives reached over $90 billion, leveraged $150 billion in private investment, funded 180 advanced manufacturing projects, and created more than 900,000 job-years. In December 2009, the
United States Patent and Trademark Office announced the Green Patent Pilot Program. The program was initiated to accelerate the examination of patent applications relating to certain green technologies, including the energy sector. The pilot program was initially designed to accommodate 3,000 applications related to certain green technology categories, and the program was originally set to expire on December 8, 2010. In May 2010, the USPTO announced that it would expand the pilot program. In 2016, federal government energy-specific subsidies and support for renewables, fossil fuels, and nuclear energy amounted to $6,682 million, $489 million and $365 million, respectively. On June 1, 2017, then-President
Donald Trump announced that the U.S. would cease participation in the
2015 Paris Agreement on
climate change mitigation, agreed to under the President
Barack Obama administration. On November 3, 2020, incoming President
Joe Biden announced that the U.S. would resume its participation. The
Energy Information Administration (EIA) predicted that the reduction in energy consumption in 2020 due to the
COVID-19 pandemic would take many years to recover. For many decades, the US imported much of its oil, but in 2020 it became a net exporter. In December 2020, Trump signed the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, which contained the Energy Act of 2020 and was the first major revision package to U.S. energy policy in over a decade. The bill contains increased incentives for energy efficiency (particularly in federal government buildings), improved funding for weatherization assistance, standards to phase out the use of
hydrofluorocarbons, plans to rebuild the nation's energy research sector including fossil fuel research, and $7 billion in demonstration projects for
carbon capture and storage. Under President Joe Biden, one-third of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve was tapped to reduce energy prices during the
COVID-19 pandemic. He also invoked the Defense Production Act to boost manufacturing of
solar cells, renewable energy generators,
fuel cells, electricity-dependent clean fuel equipment,
building insulation,
heat pumps, critical
power grid infrastructure, and
electric vehicle batteries. Biden also signed the
Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act to invest $73 billion in the energy sector. $11 billion of that amount will be invested in power grid infrastructure, with the first selected recipients for $3.46 billion announced in October 2023. This is the largest investment in the grid since the
Recovery Act. $6 billion will go to
domestic nuclear power. From the $73 billion, the IIJA will invest $45 billion in
innovation and
industrial policy for key emerging technologies in energy; $430 million to $21 billion in new demonstration projects at the DOE; and nearly $24 billion in onshoring,
supply chain resilience, and bolstering competitive advantages in energy, divided into an $8.6 billion investment in
carbon capture and storage, $3 billion in battery material reprocessing, $3 billion in
battery recycling, $1 billion in
rare-earth minerals stockpiling, and $8 billion in new research hubs for
green hydrogen. $4.7 billion will go to plugging
orphan wells abandoned by oil and gas companies. In August 2022, Biden signed the
CHIPS and Science Act to boost DOE and
National Science Foundation research activities by $174 billion. He also signed the
Inflation Reduction Act to create assistance programs for
utility cooperatives and a $27 billion
green bank, The bill appropriates $270–663 billion in clean energy and energy efficiency tax credits, including at least $158 billion for investments in clean energy and $36 billion for
home energy upgrades from public utilities. The Biden administration itself claimed that , the IIJA, CaSA, and IRA together catalyzed $1 trillion in private investment (including $449 billion in electronics and semiconductors, $184 billion in electric vehicles and batteries, $215 billion in clean power, $93 billion in clean energy tech manufacturing and infrastructure, and $51 billion in heavy industry) and over $756.2 billion in public infrastructure spending (including $99 billion in energy aside from tax credits in the IRA). Even so, the Biden administration also presided over record high oil and gas production, reaching averages of 12.9 million barrels per day nationwide in 2023, and 530,000 barrels per day from public lands since 2020 (despite a campaign pledge to halt drilling on said lands). However, growth has been driven more by
Permian Basin drilling than by the administration's policies. Around spring 2024, the Biden administration announced several changes to its energy policy approach. First, the EPA issued new tailpipe emissions limits that it projected would cut emissions by 7 billion metric tons, or 56% of 2026 levels, by 2032. Second, it raised royalty rates from 12.5% to 16.7%, doubled rents and increased lease bond minimums by a factor of 15 on federal lands for oil and gas companies. Third, the EPA finalized new standards for power plant carbon emissions, projecting cuts of 65,000 tons by 2028 and 1.38 billion tons by 2047. Fourth, the DOE announced that it would assume the role of default lead agency on permitting approvals for most new power transmission projects, as well as enact a two-year deadline, require only one environmental impact statement per project, and increase transparency around the permitting process. Lastly, it issued a new rule to make large water heaters much more energy-efficient by 2029, cutting carbon emissions by a projected 332 million tons over 30 years, as part of the DOE's overall effort since 2020 to drive 2.5 billion tons in 30-year appliance emissions cuts. On January 22, 2025, U.S. President Donald Trump declared a national energy emergency, stating that increased drilling and expedited pipeline construction would necessitate court orders. However, legal experts indicated that oil and gas producers would not be permitted to bypass all environmental laws. The national emergency law could grant the president extensive powers across 150 different pieces of legislation, yet limitations on environmental laws and regulations would still apply. “It could accelerate energy projects, but it would compromise water standards, jeopardize endangered species, and create significant gaps,” remarked Mark Novitt, a professor at Emory University School of Law. “There’s a reason those emergency regulations aren’t invoked on a daily basis.” == Department of Energy ==