S-1971-113
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 636.
Sponsored by Lisa Murkowski (R-AK)
What it does
The NEWS Act of 2014 would require the Office of Science and Technology Policy to create a dedicated committee or subcommittee under the National Science and Technology Council to coordinate federal research on the relationship between energy production and water use. The committee would be co-chaired by the Secretaries of Energy and the Interior, and would be required to issue a strategic plan within one year and update it twice yearly. It would also require the Office of Management and Budget to submit an annual interagency budget report to Congress showing how much each federal agency spends on energy-water research.
Who benefits
Federal agencies working on energy and water research, who would gain a formal coordination structure and shared goals. Researchers and scientists at national laboratories and universities who could benefit from better-aligned federal funding priorities. Water utilities and energy producers who could benefit from improved federal research into the interdependence of water and energy systems. Rural and agricultural communities that depend heavily on both water access and energy costs. States and municipalities managing water infrastructure, who could benefit from better federal data and research coordination.
Who is hurt
Federal agencies that currently operate energy-water research programs independently may face added administrative burdens from coordination requirements and mandatory reporting. Taxpayers would bear the cost of staffing and operating the new committee and producing the required reports and strategic plans, though the bill does not specify a funding amount. Congressional committees outside those named in the bill would receive less direct oversight visibility into the interagency budget crosscut report.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that energy production and water supply are deeply intertwined — power plants require enormous amounts of water to operate, and water systems require significant energy to pump and treat — yet federal research on these two systems has historically been siloed across different agencies with little coordination. They contend that a dedicated interagency committee would eliminate duplicated efforts, align federal spending more efficiently, and produce a coherent national strategy for a resource challenge that affects every region of the country. The mandatory budget crosscut report, supporters argue, would give Congress a clearer picture of how federal dollars are actually being spent across agencies, improving legislative oversight and accountability without creating a new bureaucracy or mandating new spending.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that creating another interagency committee adds a layer of bureaucracy that is unlikely to produce meaningful change, pointing to a long history of federal coordinating bodies that generate reports and strategic plans without translating them into on-the-ground results. They contend that the bill imposes real administrative costs — staff time, reporting requirements, and biannual strategic plan updates — without appropriating dedicated funding or establishing enforceable outcomes, making it more likely to become a paper exercise than a driver of genuine research progress. Critics may also argue that energy and water policy decisions are better left to individual agencies with subject-matter expertise, or to states, rather than centralized through a White House-level coordinating structure that could slow decision-making and blur lines of accountability.