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Trump Administration Cancels $3.7 Billion in Clean Energy Projects, Ending Ambitious Industrial Decarbonization Efforts

Published by Todd Bush on June 1, 2025

Energy Secretary Chris Wright announced the termination of 24 major awards on May 30, 2025, citing economic viability concerns and taxpayer protection

The U.S. Department of Energy has terminated $3.73 billion in federal funding across 24 clean energy projects, marking one of the largest cancellations of climate-focused industrial investments in recent history. The decision, announced by Energy Secretary Chris Wright, affects cutting-edge carbon capture, cement decarbonization, and industrial electrification projects spanning from California to Texas.

A Rush to the Finish Line

The timing of these awards reveals a stark political divide over climate policy. Nearly 70% of the terminated projects—16 out of 24—were signed between Election Day and President Trump's inauguration on January 20th, representing what appears to be a last-minute push by the previous administration to secure climate funding before the transition of power.

"After a thorough and individualized financial review of each award, DOE found that these projects failed to advance the energy needs of the American people, were not economically viable and would not generate a positive return on investment of taxpayer dollars," Wright stated in the announcement.

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The Largest Casualties - Cement Decarbonization, CCUS, & Chemicals

The terminated awards include some of the most ambitious industrial decarbonization projects ever proposed in the United States:

Cement Industry Transformations ($1.09 Billion)

  • Heidelberg Materials ($500M) and National Cement Company of California ($500M) each received half-billion-dollar awards for revolutionary cement production technologies
  • Heidelberg's project would have captured 95% of CO2 emissions from one of the nation's largest cement plants, preventing two million tons of annual emissions
  • National Cement's "Lebec Net Zero Project" aimed to produce carbon-neutral cement using agricultural waste biomass and advanced clay alternatives

Carbon Capture Demonstrations ($1.07 Billion)

  • Calpine Texas and SUTTER CCUS each lost $270 million for natural gas power plant carbon capture systems
  • Technip forfeited $200 million for Gulf Coast carbon capture infrastructure
  • These projects collectively targeted 95% CO2 capture rates from major industrial sources

Chemical Industry Innovation ($707 Million)

  • Eastman Chemical Company lost $375 million for plastic recycling decarbonization at its Longview, Texas facility
  • Exxon Mobil Corporation saw $332 million terminated for carbon capture at its Baytown refinery

Revolutionary Decarbonization Technologies Put on Hold

The canceled projects represented some of the most innovative approaches to industrial decarbonization:

Game-Changing Cement Production. Brimstone Energy's $189 million project promised to revolutionize cement manufacturing using calcium silicate rocks instead of limestone—a process that would actually remove CO2 from the atmosphere rather than emit it. The cement industry accounts for 7.5% of global CO2 emissions, making this technology potentially transformational.
Advanced Glass Manufacturing. Four glass companies—including Libbey Glass, Owens-Brockway, and Gallo Glass—lost a combined $223 million in funding for hybrid electric furnaces that would have reduced carbon intensity by 40-50% while maintaining product quality standards.
Mining Decarbonization. Nevada Gold Mines' $95 million project would have installed 100 MW of solar power and 248 MWh of battery storage across active gold mining operations, demonstrating how extractive industries could achieve net-zero operations.

Geographic and Economic Impact

The terminated projects were distributed across key industrial states:

  • Texas bore the largest impact with $1.1 billion in canceled funding across 6 projects
  • California lost $845 million across 4 projects
  • Industrial heartland states including Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, and Alabama saw significant cancellations

The projects were expected to create thousands of construction and permanent jobs while demonstrating technologies that could be replicated across American industry.

Industry Response and Implications

The cancellations represent a fundamental shift in federal energy policy, moving away from direct subsidies for emerging clean technologies toward market-driven solutions. Critics argue the decision abandons American leadership in industrial innovation at a critical moment when other nations are investing heavily in similar technologies.

The cement industry, in particular, faces mounting pressure to decarbonize as demand is expected to double by 2050. Without federal support for breakthrough technologies, American cement producers may lag behind international competitors developing carbon-neutral alternatives.

What Comes Next

The terminated awards free up $3.6 billion in immediate taxpayer savings, which the Trump administration says will be redirected toward projects that "strengthen national security" and "bolster affordable, reliable energy sources."

However, the decision effectively ends federal support for several promising industrial decarbonization pathways that had progressed through rigorous technical and financial reviews. Companies affected by the cancellations will need to either proceed with private funding or abandon projects that took years to develop.

The cancellations mark a clear departure from the previous administration's industrial decarbonization strategy, signaling that future clean energy development will likely depend on market forces rather than federal demonstration funding.

The 24 terminated projects represented awards across cement manufacturing, carbon capture and storage, glass production, chemical processing, mining operations, and industrial electrification—technologies that collectively could have prevented millions of tons of annual CO2 emissions while maintaining American industrial competitiveness.



Source: Notus.org

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