Four years leading a federal office overseeing billions in funding, a national lab, and regulatory programs that shape energy use in nearly every home and business. Nearly thirty years navigating the agencies, the statutes, and the people who write them.
The firm advises energy companies, trade associations, universities, and investors on federal funding strategy, proposal development, agency engagement, and regulatory matters. Engagements are deliberately limited so the principal — not a junior team — meaningfully works each one.
Direct engagement at DOE, other federal agencies, and the Hill.
Read more →Identifying opportunities and aligning technology strategies with agency priorities.
Read more →Strategic guidance and drafting support for competitive federal funding proposals.
Read more →Oversaw the Department of Energy's Appliance Standards Program which regulates 40% of U.S. energy use.
Read more →"Signing off on billions of dollars in DOE awards was my core function as Assistant Secretary. I know exactly what a winning application looks like — because I approved them."
Mr. Simmons has spent decades educating the public and elected officials about energy and then four years at the Department of Energy funding wind, solar, geothermal, efficiency, EVs, batteries, and advanced manufacturing. Clients across the energy spectrum have benefited from an advisor who has worked across all of it.
Daniel served as Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy — leading that office for all four years of the first Trump administration. The office has since been renamed the Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation (CMEI), and it now sits at the center of the administration's energy agenda. In that role, Mr. Simmons held direct oversight responsibility for nearly $9 billion in federal funding and more than 800 staff, including oversight of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.
That experience produced a vantage point available nowhere else. Mr. Simmons participated in the full lifecycle of DOE investment programs from the inside: the genesis of policy priorities within the administration, working with Congress on authorization and appropriations, the development and issuance of funding opportunities, the merit review and selection of awards, and post-award management and execution. He knows the individuals across DOE, the interagency process, and the White House policy apparatus who shape these programs — not from the outside, but as a peer and former colleague.
Before his Senate-confirmed appointment, Daniel was Vice President for Policy at the Institute for Energy Research. He has held senior policy roles at the American Legislative Exchange Council and the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. He is an attorney by training, nominated by President Donald J. Trump and confirmed by the United States Senate by unanimous consent.
Mr. Simmons was confirmed an Assistant Secretary by unamious consent — no small feat for the Trump administration's point person on funding renewable energy. As a former Hill staffer and someone who has testified on Capitol Hill numerous times, he understands how to communicate with Congressional Staff and Members of Congress.
Mr. Simmons understands precisely how DOE funding opportunities are structured, what DOE is really looking for, and where the real decision-making authority sits within the Department — because he designed and issued those programs.
Signing off on billions of dollars in DOE awards was a core function of Mr. Simmons' portfolio as Assistant Secretary. He knows exactly what a winning application looks like because he approved them. That expertise is applied directly to ensure proposals are technically credible, commercially compelling, compliantly structured, and aligned with DOE's stated and unstated priorities.
Mr. Simmons oversaw the DOE Appliance Standards Program — a regulatory program that touches roughly 40 percent of all U.S. energy consumption. He understands how regulations are actually promulated, including undertanding of the law, adminsitrative procedures, and the politics of regulation.
A state-level analysis finds no meaningful correlation between data center concentration and retail electricity price increases — and points to grid cost structure and state policy as the real drivers.
DOE's April 9 informational session on the $50 million NOFO — evaluation criteria weights, the new biosketch requirement, topic area eligibility nuances, and the strict Q&A protocol.
A summary of DE-FOA-0003548 — three topic areas covering deployment and planning projects, no cost share for planning grants, and a July 24 application deadline.
A summary of the Office of Electricity's SPARK informational webinar — program goals, the three topic areas, cost-share requirements, and the April 2 concept paper deadline.