Industry and Democrats warn illegal freeze of IRA/IIJA funds will slow projects and raise costs
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Summary
Witnesses and multiple Democratic members said the administration’s pause on distributing funds from the Inflation Reduction Act and Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act is delaying projects, costing jobs and risking higher electricity prices; they urged restoring funding and congressional oversight.
Democratic members described the presidential pause on distributing funds authorized by the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) as harmful to projects and workers. The committee heard multiple accounts of grants, loan guarantees and tax‑credit‑driven investments that are delayed or paused.
The ranking member of the full committee said, “On his first day in office, president Trump illegally froze billions of dollars in investments in the energy sector that were passed into law by congress.” Members and witnesses described immediate effects: companies pausing hiring, developers unable to finance projects, and state programs delaying awards. Tyler O'Connor said the pause undermines investor confidence and cited research finding that repealing or withholding IRA funding could raise electricity prices (~10% on average, per cited studies): “If we don't bring those new projects onto the grid, then we're going to have to do more with less and we're simply incapable of doing so.”
Witnesses also identified specific programs affected. O'Connor referenced a sustainable aviation fuel facility that expected Loan Programs Office support and noted the uncertainty when LPO funds are held. Witnesses argued that the pause can stall manufacturing investments that the IRA had begun to attract, particularly for batteries, solar components and critical mineral processing.
Republican witnesses and members countered that some executive actions were intended to change policy direction and support expanded fossil fuel production. The committee ended without votes; members said they will send oversight letters to agencies and seek documentation on funds withheld and projects delayed.

