man in dark suite, white shirt, dark tie sitting behind desk with hands folded on desk, dark blue walls behind him and photos on wall
Screenshot of Gov. Wes Moore from his official Facebook page's 2026 Legislative Agenda video.

Gov. Wes Moore announced the Lower Bills and Local Power Act as part of the Moore-Miller administrationโ€™s 2026 legislative agenda. Its goal is to combat rising utility costs and make better use of local, affordable energy sources.

The legislation introduces ways of paying for local clean energy projects, modernizing the electric grid, and giving rebates directly to Maryland families.

โ€œEnergy policy is about more than megawatts and transmission corridorsโ€”it is about whether Maryland families can afford to live in their homes,โ€ Moore said. โ€œThatโ€™s why our administration is stepping up to deliver real relief, focusing on driving down the cost of utility bills for Marylanders, and investing in local projects that make energy more reliable and affordable.โ€

In December 2025, Moore signed an executive order with similar overarching goals called โ€œBuilding an Affordable and Reliable Energy Future.โ€ The order was a response to data showing that residential energy rates had risen 44% since 2020. The legislation Moore put forward is in line with that order, using nearly $200 million from the Strategic Energy Investment Fund to address rising energy costs that are impacting Maryland households.

The Lower Bills and Local Power Act is structured as a three-pillared approach: providing direct relief to Marylanders, modernizing infrastructure, and developing local generation.

For direct relief, approximately half the funding from the legislation โ€“ $100 million โ€“ would be allocated to Maryland families for a new round of utility bill rebates in the fall. This is in addition to the $200 million already delivered through the Next Generation Energy Act.

As for modernizing Marylandโ€™s transmission infrastructure, the bill requires utility companies to use the most advanced technology that would best enhance the grid when expanding capacity. Under the new requirements, utilities would have to submit plans and receive approval from the Public Service Commission before they could build new transmission lines.

To develop local generation of energy, Mooreโ€™s legislation allocates $10 million from the Strategic Energy Investment Fund to the Maryland Department of Transportation (MDOT) for finding ways to transmit energy along state and interstate highways. MDOT would use the funds to โ€œidentify opportunities for high-voltage transmission lines and battery storage projectsโ€ that could leverage the highwayโ€™s right-of-way that already exists. The state would not need to buy additional land, making the process of deploying high-voltage capacity for improved grid performance much simpler and faster.

โ€œThe Maryland Department of Transportation is a proud partner and supporter of the Moore-Miller Administrationโ€™s efforts to modernize the stateโ€™s energy grid and lower energy costs,โ€ said Katie Thomson, acting secretary of MDOT. โ€œWith Governor Mooreโ€™s Lower Bills and Local Power Act, I look forward to the continued collaboration with our state energy partners, doing what the Department does bestโ€”finding practical solutions that keep Maryland moving toward a more affordable, sustainable future.โ€

The legislation also eliminates the 0.5% incentive that allows utilities to collect extra profits and requires they joined Marylandโ€™s regional transmission organization, PJM Interconnection, promoting accountability for all utilities.

โ€œIn the face of rapidly rising utility bills, our state leaders need to scrutinize every cost that is being charged to ratepayers,โ€ said Emily Scarr, senior advisor at Maryland Public Interest Research Group. โ€œGov. Mooreโ€™s proposal to require utility participation in regional grid planning and management will save Maryland utility customers twenty million dollars a year.โ€

โ€œWe support Governor Moore’s initiative to address energy affordability, especially after the reduction of federal funds,โ€ said Kim Coble, executive director of League of Conservation Voters Maryland. โ€œBy financing shovel-ready solar plus storage projects, this legislation ensures utility accountability and prioritizes the most cost-effective, rapidly deployable energy sources making energy more affordable for all Marylanders.โ€

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