I’ve written several articles in the past two years about how much Nevada stands to benefit from the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).
The only state in the country with an active lithium mine, the Silver State has received enormous investment, buoyed by federal incentives in the 2022 law, to activate the lithium loop. State agencies and groups have diligently applied for their share of various federal pots for renewable energy and energy efficiency improvement goals, from electric school buses to solar installations to electric appliance rebates.
But rather than processing applications from Nevadans, state agencies and groups are now at an impasse — because the Trump administration has unilaterally frozen these funds under an executive order pausing all IRA disbursements
Is it legal? That’s a question for the courts to decide. But for state groups expecting the money — one of the safest bets in business — the more pressing question is how to plan moving forward.
Let’s get into it.
The News of the Week: IRA spending freeze
Tens of billions of dollars have been on hold for weeks for projects across the states as the Trump administration reviews IRA spending.
An enormous law, the IRA created a number of grant programs to stimulate renewable energy production and make energy efficiency upgrades more affordable and accessible for Americans, with a focus on low-income Americans.
Many of these large grants are structured as passthrough grants, meaning federal agencies grant a large sum to a state agency, which then coordinates its own in-state application and disbursement process. Many were scheduled to begin this year.
These funds are legally obligated — while a pause or delay is allowed, a rescission — without congressional approval — is tantamount to impoundment, which is illegal per a 1970s era law. Key figures in the Trump administration, however, believe impoundment is permissible, and want a court fight.
Despite court orders for the Trump administration to unfreeze funds, grantees have remained in limbo.
“This is mostly going to hurt families and small businesses and local economies,” said Leah Rubin Shen, a managing director who works on Western energy policy at Advanced Energy United, a trade association for renewable energy groups. “These are the ultimate beneficiaries of a lot of this funding.”
The Nevada Angle
Enormous pots of money are supposed to come to Nevada. The Governor’s Office of Energy (GOE) is the primary recipient of several enormous grants, all of which are frozen at the moment, from the IRA and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. To highlight a few:
- The Home Efficiency Rebates Program and Home Electrification and Appliance Rebates Program, for which Nevada is eligible for nearly $100 million for rebates for individuals to get home energy efficiency upgrades or electric appliances, with the value of the rebate dependent on the projected energy savings to a household.
- The Grid Resilience Formula Grant, which funds upgrades to build resilience of the state’s electric grid, including weatherization and fire prevention.
The home efficiency rebate applications are scheduled to open to eligible households in Nevada in “early 2025,” according to GOE’s website. GOE spokesperson Laule’a Akana-Philips said the office has not adjusted timelines for the delivery of any federal grants.
But if the delay goes on longer, GOE and other entities may have to push back deadlines. GOE’s biennial budget request for 2025 to 2027 is reliant on federal funds for 45 percent of planned expenditures.
The Nevada Clean Energy Fund (NCEF) — the state’s clean energy bank — is also experiencing challenges. NCEF manages three large grants through the Environmental Protection Agency:
- Solar for All, a $156 million program for moderate and low-income households, businesses and nonprofits to finance community and residential solar
- The Clean School Bus Program, from which NCEF received nearly $8 million in grants to replace aging school buses with electric buses
- A Community Change Grant of $20 million for the Walker River Paiute Tribe to provide home energy upgrades, new water infrastructure and the construction of a Community Resilience Hub for emergencies including extreme heat events
Xiltali Ayala, a caretaker in Las Vegas, said she was planning to apply for Solar for All funds to install solar panels on her house to save on her monthly energy bills. During the summer, when the air conditioning needs to be on constantly, Ayala has struggled between paying for rent and electricity.
If the funds don’t become available, Ayala said her living situation may become too untenable to continue.
“We’re thinking of moving out of Las Vegas,” she said through a translator. “Because if we don’t get to a solution, what are we going to do?”
Potential relief came Friday morning, when NCEF, for the first time since Trump issued his executive order, was able to draw down funds from its Solar for All account. But the Clean School Bus program and Community Change Grant remain frozen.
Some grants go directly to nonprofits, such as the Valley Electric Association (VEA), a Pahrump-based co-op that received an $80 million IRA grant from the Department of Agriculture to build new energy storage systems and add electricity to the grid, making energy prices less volatile. VEA is counting on the money to begin construction in the second half of 2025. That money is currently frozen.
In a statement, VEA CEO Robby Hamlin said he believes the mission of the project is in line with the Trump administration’s goals.
“We understand the administration shares our priorities of affordable, independent and reliable electricity, and sincerely hope for their continued support of this project for rural Nevadans,” Hamlin said.
The Impact
NCEF, the GOE and VEA are proceeding with the expectation that they will receive their funds, given the government is legally obligated to provide them. But NCEF is also working to ensure partners are not burned in the process.
School districts, for example, can still invoice NCEF for buses, and NCEF will know whether they can draw down funds before school districts have to pay for anything. But if the federal spigot is not turned on soon, agencies will need to start delaying timelines.
Around the Capitol
🧑⚖️Ford v. DOGE — Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford and 12 other Democratic state attorneys general have sued to stop employees affiliated with Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency from having access to citizens’ private information — including their bank accounts and Social Security numbers — through government servers.
DOGE aides have been systemically granted access to internal systems in various departments, including the Department of the Treasury, that the Democratic AGs say is unlawful. The lawsuit is being led by New York Attorney General Letitia James.
👟NCAA bars trans athletes from competing — Trump signed an executive order Thursday directing federal agencies to cut off funding for school that allow transgender students to compete in athletics. Though there are fewer than 10 transgender athletes in the NCAA, the college sports governing body said it would bar trans women from competing in women’s sports.
Near the end of the 2024 election cycle, the issue became a campaign flashpoint after the UNR women’s volleyball team voted to opt out of a match against San Jose State University because it has a transgender player.
🔵Cook Political ratings: more of the same — In its first House ratings for the 2026 cycle, the state of play in Nevada is the same as it was in 2024. Rep. Susie Lee’s (D-NV) district is considered “lean Democrat,” while Reps. Dina Titus (D-NV) and Steven Horsford (D-NV) are “likely Democrat.”
The big question: Are Republican groups going to play in Congressional District 3 after Lee won by only 3 percentage points? They threw millions at the district in 2022 to no avail — and Lee’s races have been closer in presidential election years.
What I’m Reading
Associated Press: Trump administration will consider redrawing boundaries of national monuments as part of energy push
Trump’s legal authority to do something is unclear, but it could seriously affect Nevada’s national monuments, all created by Democrats.
The Nevada Independent: Trump likely won’t be able to change Nevada’s federal judiciary makeup. Here’s why.
Only one Nevada-based judge is retirement-eligible — and, as a Democratic nominee, she’s unlikely to.
Food & Wine: Dairy cows in Nevada test positive for a deadly strain of bird flu — here’s what you need to know
What’s a little more chaos and uncertainty?
Notable and Quotable
“This is not a red state versus blue state thing. Almost all states were counting on this money and had designed programs to take advantage of it.”
— Advanced Energy United’s Leah Rubin Shen, on who is hurt from the IRA funding freeze
Vote of the Week
PN11-14 — On the Nomination: Confirmation: Eric Turner, of Texas, to be Secretary of Housing and Development
Democrats are mostly rejecting all Trump nominees at this point because they are furious about the federal funding freezes. Cortez Masto said she would oppose this nomination weeks ago, over concerns about his lack of experience and willingness to support freezes.
CORTEZ MASTO: No
ROSEN: No