August 28, 2025
Journal Article
Blockchain Research and Development Activities Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy and Utility Sector
Abstract
A total of 110 blockchain activities within the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the U.S. power industry were successfully tracked and mapped into a newly developed categorization framework to reveal the blockchain portfolio investments within the U.S. energy sector. The framework lists Energy System Domain as the first ordinate dimension, with 30 potential use case applications, and Blockchain Properties as the second dimension. The aim was to capture blockchain's applicability and functionality: where and why blockchain? Principles behind the selection of the viewpoint dimensions were carefully defined based on consensus obtained through the Blockchain for Optimized Security and Energy Management (BLOSEM) project. The mapped results show that activities within the Grid Automation, Coordination, and Control (31.8%), Marketplaces and Trading (25.5%), Foundational Blockchain Research (19.1%), and Supply Chain Management (17.3%) domains have been actively pursued to date. The three leading specific use case applications were identified as Transactive Energy Management for Marketplaces and Trading, Asset Management for Supply Chain Management, and Fundamental Blockchain for Foundational Blockchain Research. The Marketplaces and Trading and Retail Services Enablement domains stood out as being favored by industry by a factor greater than 2 (2.3 and 2.6, respectively), yet there seemed to be little to zero investment from DOE. Approximately 76% of the total projects prioritized Immutability, Identity Management, and Decentralization and/or Disintermediation compared to Asset Digitization and/or Tokenization, Automation, and Privacy and/or Anonymity. The greatest discrepancies between DOE and industry were in Asset Digitization and/or Tokenization and Automation. The industry efforts (36% in Asset Digitization/Tokenization and 22% in Automation) was 14 times and 2.4 times, respectively, more intensive than the DOE-sponsored efforts, indicating a significant discrepancy in industry versus government priorities. Overall, quantifying the DOE-sponsored projects and industry activities through mapping the energy system domains and blockchain properties provides clarity on portfolio investments, which allows for assessments of the research and development gaps and opportunities for future research efforts.Published: August 28, 2025