#20

250 General Science, Space & Technology:Eliminate Energy Information Hubs

Savings in Millions of Dollars
  • 2016
    24
  • 2017
    24
  • 2018
    24
  • 2019
    25
  • 2020
    25
  • 2021
    26
  • 2022
    26
  • 2023
    27
  • 2024
    28
  • 2025
    28
  • 2016-2020
    122
  • 2016-2025
    257

Sources

Savings are expressed as budget authority and were calculated by using the FY 2014 enacted spending levels as found in page 37 of House of Representatives, 113th Congress, 2nd Session, “Energy and Water Development Appropriations Bill, 2015.”  The FY 2014 enacted spending was increased at the same rate as discretionary spending for 2016–2025, according to the CBO’s most recent August 2014 baseline spending projections.

×

Technical Notes on Scoring

CBO Baseline

Unless otherwise noted, calculations for savings for each recommendation relies on the most recent Congressional Budget Office baseline, as found in “An Update to the Budget and Economic Outlook: 2014 to 2024,” published August 27, 2014, has been used.

Savings “Totals”

While totals for the five and 10 year savings are provided by section and for the complete set of recommendations, there are two reasons they should not be viewed as representing total savings for The Budget Book.

First, as noted in the introduction, The Heritage Foundation would recommend that the savings realized in the Function 050 Defense section would stay within the Department of Defense to strengthen the nation’s defense capabilities.

Second, the numbers cannot be deemed to represent the realized savings if every single recommendation were adopted because policy changes made in one program can impact spending levels in other programs.  Thus, the numbers in the table do not reflect any potential interactions between the various policy changes affecting spending or savings.

×

Heritage Recommendation:

Eliminate Energy Information Hubs. This proposal saves $24 million in 2016, and $259 million over 10 years.

Rationale:

24 million a year for Information Hubs? Come on, they can be eliminated

Energy Information Hubs create multidisciplinary teams to overcome obstacles in energy technologies. The Department of Energy should create multidisciplinary teams across offices and different agencies to reduce bureaucracy and pull valuable knowledge into different disciplines of research. The problem with the Energy Information Hubs is that they focus on promoting specific energy sources and technology developments.

Government projects that have become commercial successes—the Internet, computer chips, the global positioning system (GPS)—were not initially intended to meet a commercial demand but were developed for national security needs. Entrepreneurs saw an opportunity in these defense technologies and created the commercially viable products available today. The role of the DOE should be to conduct the basic research that the private sector would not undertake and create a system that allows the private sector, using private funds, to tap into that research and commercialize it. Federal labs should allow basic research to reach the market organically.

24 million a year for Information Hubs? Come on, they can be eliminated

Contributing Expert

Nicolas (Nick) Loris, an economist, focuses on energy, environmental and regulatory issues as the Herbert and Joyce Morgan fellow at The Heritage Foundation.

See publications by Nicolas Loris

Nicolas (Nick) LorisHerbert and Joyce Morgan Fellow

Heritage Experts

Jack Spencer oversees Heritage Foundation research on a wide range of domestic economic issues as director of the Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies. Those topics include federal spending, taxes, energy and environment, regulation and retirement savings.

See publications by Jack Spencer

Jack SpencerVice President for the Institute for Economic Freedom and Opportunity

Katie Tubb is a Research Associate and Coordinator in the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies

See publications by Katie Tubb

Katie TubbResearch Associate and Coordinator

Additional Reading