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ACEEE Analysis

Summary of The Department of Energy's FY 2004 Budget Request


February 2003

DOE's FY 2004 budget requests would cut spending on energy efficiency research and development, which is the core of the efficiency program's mission, by 8%. Compared to the 2002 budget, which is the level at which the agency is operating today because of delays in the FY 2003 appropriations legislation, the Administration's request is effectively a 12% cut in efficiency R&D. This is presented as a reduction of "only" 4% energy efficiency compared to the FY 2003 request, because of increases in grants for weatherization and other state and community programs.. It is also worth noting that when inflation is taken into account, the overall efficiency funding cut is 6%.

Of the individual efficiency R&D program budgets, the only significant increase is in fuel cell technologies, consistent with the President's announced hydrogen initiative. The largest cuts come in the industrial (30%) and federal energy management (15%) programs. Larger cuts were requested in the biomass and climate control budgets, but these are not primarily aimed at energy efficiency.

The table below summarizes overall efficiency spending in the 2004 request.

(Dollars in Thousands)
Program
FY 2002
Funding
FY 2003
Request
FY 2004
Request
Change from
FY 2003
Comments
Vehicle
Technologies
181,352
153,563
157,623
+2.6%
13% cut from 2002 level
Fuel Cell
Technologies
46,682
57,500
77,500
+34.8%
 
Weatherization &
Deployment
324,181
359,446
356,960
-0.7%
 
Distributed Energy
Resources
55,137
54,784
51,784
-5.5%
 
Building
Technologies
63,062
52,563
52,563
---
17% cut from 2002 levels
Industrial
Technologies
100,909
91,477
64,429
-29.6%
36% cut from 2002 levels
Biomass and
Biorefinery R&D
24,779
23,939
8,808
-63.2%
 
Federal Energy
Management
18,900
23,425
19,962
-14.8%
 
Climate Control
Tech. Initiative
---
20,000
9,500
-52.5%
 
Program
Management
81,442
74,954
76,664
+2.3%
 
Total
894,464
911,651
875,793
-3.9%
 
Total Grants
275,000
315,898
326,998
+3.5%
 
Total Non-Grant
621,464
595,753
548,795
-7.9%
12% cut relative to 2002 level

The pages that follow provide more detail on individual program budgets.


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