Energy Bills Relief Act Would Get Cheap Energy onto the Grid
Statement from EDF VP for Political and Government Affairs Joanna Slaney
(WASHINGTON, D.C.) – Today Reps. Sean Casten (D-IL), Mike Levin (D-CA) and over 100 original co-sponsors introduced the Energy Bills Relief Act.
“Electricity bills are rising, and people need relief,” said Joanna Slaney, Vice President for Political and Government Affairs, Environmental Defense Fund. “Instead, the Trump administration is blocking the energy sources that are the cheapest and fastest to deploy. The Energy Bills Relief Act would get needed affordable, clean and reliable energy onto the grid, significantly improve grid reliability and help people pay their electricity bills.”
To help reduce consumer electricity bills, the Energy Bills Relief Act would provide support for home energy efficiency programs, provide energy bill assistance to millions of households, prevent the president from blocking clean energy projects and restore the Inflation Reduction Act’s clean energy tax credits that spurred unprecedented investments in cheap energy.
More information about the bill can be found here.
With more than 3 million members, Environmental Defense Fund creates transformational solutions to the most serious environmental problems. To do so, EDF links science, economics, law, and innovative private-sector partnerships to turn solutions into action. edf.org
Latest press releases
-
Trump administration issues another illegal mandate to keep Orlando area coal plant open past retirement
June 5, 2026 -
Environmental Groups Help Secure Rate Protections for Pennsylvanians
June 5, 2026 -
Trump administration to pour even more taxpayer money into costly, unreliable coal plants
June 4, 2026 -
Delaying “Tier 4” pollution standards would cost hundreds of lives, billions of dollars
June 3, 2026 -
New study shows wetlands loss has increased residential flood insurance claim payments by $10 billion
June 1, 2026 -
California Cap-and-Invest updates deeply misguided, undermine the program’s potential to curb pollution and invest in communities
May 29, 2026