A federal agency Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) signed this week provides that the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) will assume lead responsibilities to implement the ENERGY STAR program as oversight of the effective, popular, and voluntary public-private partnership shifts from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). (E&E News, March 5)
ENERGY STAR Transition
DOE and EPA signed the MOA for an “orderly” transition of ENERGY STAR activities including oversight of partnership agreements, trademarks, and related IT systems and databases. (Memorandum, March 2)
The MOA explains that a 90-day plan will provide details regarding the agencies’ transition.
The MOA further explains that transition activities will be initially funded by each agency using their own funds appropriated by Congress. Federal law authorizes DOE and EPA to transfer funds “as the transition progresses.”
Congress provided approximately $33 million for ENERGY STARto EPA in the FY’26 appropriations bill (H.R. 6938), signed into law on Jan. 23. This law maintains funding through Sept. 30 and preserves ENERGY STAR following prior Trump administration reports to privatize the program – or de-fund it altogether. (Roundtable Weekly, Jan. 9)
Why It Matters
The Real Estate Roundtable's (RER) advocacy, in collaboration with coalition partners in the real estate, manufacturing, and consumer products sectors, has long emphasized that ENERGY STAR is a federal program required by federal law. It cannot be privatized or run outside of the U.S. government by agency decree. (Roundtable Weekly, May 9, 2025)
For example, RER joined dozens of industry groups last year in a letter to Congress to “strongly support continuation of the non-regulatory and non-partisan ENERGY STAR program within the federal government.”(Roundtable Weekly, June 6). The multi-industry letter cites federal statutes that compel ENERGY STAR to be a program run by federal agencies—with DOE and EPA authorized to assign program responsibilities between themselves, as indicated by this week’s Memorandum of Agreement.
RER View
Tony Malkin (Chairman and CEO, Empire State Realty Trust, Inc.)
RER has long urged the “business case” to support the ENERGY STAR program.
“We look forward to continuing our longstanding partnership with the federal government’s ENERGY STAR program as DOE assumes the lead implementation role,” said RER's President & CEO Jeffrey D. DeBoer. “DOE has the data, talent, lab research, and other resources to run all facets of ENERGY STAR efficiently and effectively. Down the years, ENERGY STAR for buildings has saved families and businesses hundreds of billions of dollars in energy costs, and helps create greater capacity on the grid to boost economic growth. We are ready to roll-up-our-sleeves to evolve ENERGY STAR to support a new generation of cutting-edge buildings, plants, and consumer products.”
“DOE has long been a key part of the ENERGY STAR ecosystem and is ideally suited to assume the role as the program’s primary steward,” said RER’s Sustainability Policy Advisory Committee (SPAC) Chair, Anthony E. Malkin (Chairman and CEO, Empire State Realty Trust, Inc.). “ENERGY STAR enhances profitability of buildings and establishes a voluntary reporting structure for real estate assets. It helps our industry attract investors from all over the world to the United States. ENERGY STAR works better than any other building energy ‘label’ on the market because it is grounded in quantifiable metrics and deploys standard software geared to save money on utility bills and avoid wasted energy.”
Malkin continued, “Real estate’s coalition with the manufacturing sector will continue to impress upon Congress and the Trump administration the critical role ENERGY STAR plays to advance America’s energy dominance and global competitiveness.”
In the coming months, RER will partner with DOE, EPA, and aligned stakeholders to accomplish a seamless and productive transition of the ENERGY STAR program.