Governor Wes Moore (D) has officially signed the Utility RELIEF Act into law, a bipartisan measure intended to curb Maryland’s soaring electricity costs. While the administration frames the act as a win for taxpayers, the law achieves immediate savings by scaling back EmPOWER Maryland, the state’s flagship energy efficiency and green energy initiative.
Trading Long-Term Efficiency for Short-Term Relief
To provide immediate financial breathing room for households, Maryland lawmakers opted to cut the EmPOWER program rather than issue direct rebates. Currently, the average Maryland household pays $15 to $20 per month to fund EmPOWER. The program’s size will be considerably reduced from 2027 through 2029. The state moved $100 million in previously collected funds back into the program to lower the surcharge starting this July. Democrats estimate the EmPOWER cuts alone will save customers approximately $150 per year (about $12.50 per month).
“Short-Sighted” or “Necessary”?
The decision to slice a program that incentivizes home insulation and HVAC upgrades has sparked a fierce debate over the true cost of these “pennies” saved. Many View Environmental groups and the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE) warn that while the move saves $640 million over three years, it could add $1.2 billion in infrastructure costs over the next decade because energy demand will not be reduced as effectively.

The Political Fallout
Senate Minority Whip Justin Ready (R) called the bill an “admission of guilt,” arguing that the Democrats’ previous “aggressive mandates” are what drove rates up in the first place. Senate Minority Leader Steve Hershey (R) mocked the savings as “measly,” noting that many families have seen their bills rise by hundreds of dollars recently.
New Restrictions on Big Utilities
Beyond the green energy cuts, the RELIEF Act takes an aggressive stance toward utility corporations to prevent cost-shifting onto taxpayers. The law places a one-year moratorium on “speculative forecasting,” a practice where utilities set rates based on anticipated rather than actual costs. Pepco has already been forced to reduce a proposed rate increase by $8.6 million due to this change. New limits have been placed on using ratepayer dollars to fund supervisors’ salaries. The state allocated $37 million to a new program that limits electric bills to 6% of income for low-income residents.
A Dangerous Game
Calling this bill the “RELIEF Act” feels like a bit of a marketing stretch when the primary source of that relief is gutting the very program designed to lower bills permanently through efficiency. Maryland is effectively trading a few dollars today for a billion-dollar infrastructure bill tomorrow.
The “Measly” $12 Problem, I see the logic in wanting a “quick win” before an election, but cutting EmPOWER is the definition of “short-sighted.” Governor Moore claims this bill “invests in local clean energy,” but you can’t claim to be a clean energy leader while pausing the programs that actually reduce energy waste.





