Energy

The Biden Admin Is Scrambling To Spend $27 Billion ‘Slush Fund’ Before Congress Claws It Back

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President Joe Biden’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is making plans to rapidly invest billions of dollars in green energy and technology projects before the money must be returned to Congress in just over a year, The Washington Post reported Wednesday.

The $27 billion Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund (GGRF) is one of several funding opportunities for green projects established by Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) that Democrats are hoping to fully spend before Republicans have a chance to take back control of Congress, the Post reported. The GGRF is unique, however, because the IRA mandates it fully disburse its funding by September 30, 2024, a move by Democrats to shield the program from GOP efforts to recover the funds, an anonymous Democratic aide told the outlet. (RELATED: Biden’s World Bank Head Promises To Spend ‘As Much As We Possibly Can’ On Climate Change)

“We did craft it with the motivation to have EPA stand up the program quickly to save it from the risk of potential future repeal efforts,” the aide said, according to the Post. Democratic Sen. Thomas Carper of Delaware, chair of the Environment and Public Works Committee, said that he had instructed the EPA to “waste no time” on disbursing the funds because “we are running out of time” to combat climate change, the Post reported.

WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 20: EPA Administrator Michael Regan gives remarks at an event announcing new national clean air standards for heavy-duty trucks near the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Headquarters on December 20, 2022 in Washington, DC. EPA officials hope the new standards will omit smog and soot-forming emissions from heavy-duty trucks and protect public health. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON, DC – DECEMBER 20: EPA Administrator Michael Regan gives remarks at an event announcing new national clean air standards for heavy-duty trucks near the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Headquarters on December 20, 2022 in Washington, DC. EPA officials hope the new standards will omit smog and soot-forming emissions from heavy-duty trucks and protect public health. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Republicans have criticized the fund in the past, questioning whether the EPA’s investments in green energy would benefit American consumers, the Post reported.

The fund “allocates an incredible amount of authority and resources” without sufficient accountability or transparency, Sean Kelly, a spokesman for the GOP arm of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, told the Post. “In other words, this provision creates a taxpayer-funded slush fund for Wall Street and heightens the risk for overspending, fraud and abuse.”

The EPA launched the first $7 billion in funding from the green bank last week via the Solar for All grant competition, which will fund solar projects in low-income communities, according to an agency press release. The agency expects to announce two additional grant competitions in the coming weeks, a $14 billion competition to finance the deployment of green technology nationwide and a $6 billion competition to help local lenders finance green projects.

The agency “is confident we will obligate funds for the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund before the statutory deadline of September 30, 2024,” EPA spokesman Tim Carroll told the Post.

The EPA did not immediately provide comment for this story.

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