HR-1420-116
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 265.
What it does
This bill would require each federal agency to work with the Office of Management and Budget, the Department of Energy (DOE), and the Environmental Protection Agency to create a plan for buying and using energy-efficient information technology at federal facilities. It would also require DOE to run a certification program for energy specialists who assess federal data centers, and to launch a public database of federal data center energy usage to encourage efficiency and consolidation.
Who benefits
Federal taxpayers who may see reduced government energy costs; energy efficiency technology companies and vendors who would gain a new federal market for their products; workers seeking certification as energy practitioners through the DOE program; researchers and private-sector innovators who would gain access to open federal data center energy usage data; and communities near federal facilities that may see reduced local energy consumption and associated emissions.
Who is hurt
Incumbent technology vendors currently supplying federal agencies with less energy-efficient equipment, who may lose contracts; federal agency IT staff who would face new compliance, reporting, and coordination burdens; and federal agencies that may incur upfront costs to replace or upgrade existing technology infrastructure before the end of its useful life.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the federal government is one of the largest consumers of electricity in the United States, and that its data centers and information technology systems represent a significant and addressable source of energy waste. By requiring agencies to develop efficiency strategies and certifying qualified practitioners to evaluate data centers, the bill would bring professional standards and accountability to an area that has historically lacked them. Supporters also contend that making federal energy usage data publicly available would spur private-sector innovation and allow independent oversight of government efficiency efforts. Over time, they argue, reduced energy consumption would lower operating costs for taxpayers and decrease the government's overall environmental footprint without mandating specific technologies or outcomes.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill adds layers of bureaucratic coordination requirements — across agencies, OMB, DOE, and EPA — that may slow down federal IT procurement and operations without guaranteeing meaningful energy savings. They contend that the costs of developing agency-wide implementation strategies, training and certifying energy practitioners, and building a new open data platform could outweigh projected efficiency gains, particularly if agencies lack the staff or budget to act on the resulting recommendations. Critics may also argue that existing federal procurement rules and market forces already incentivize energy efficiency, making the bill duplicative of current efforts. Additionally, publishing detailed data center energy usage data could raise security concerns by revealing information about federal IT infrastructure capacity and vulnerabilities.