The feds said Friday they did not approve a $300 million no-bid contract between Puerto Rico’s power authority and a tiny Montana company with ties to Team Trump to repair the island’s crippled electrical grid.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency said it “has not confirmed if the contract prices are reasonable” under the deal between the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority (PREPA) and Whitefish Energy, a two-year-old firm with two full-time employees.

The contract was awarded to the firm from the hometown of Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke without competitive bidding, according to media reports.

A Whitefish spokesman said the company welcomed an audit of its work.

“The contract was done in good faith with PREPA” and “speaks for itself,” Ken Luce told MSNBC, adding: “There’s nothing there.”

FEMA said it is “engaged with PREPA and its legal counsel to obtain information about the contract and contracting process, including how the contract was procured and how PREPA determined the contract prices were reasonable,” The Hill reported.

The agency said in a statement Friday that any language in the contract saying it approved the deal with Whitefish is inaccurate — and that it has not approved any reimbursement requests from PREPA.

The contract states that FEMA had “reviewed and approved” it for compliance with its disaster recovery regulations, according to The Hill.

Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello told the Department of Homeland Security on Wednesday that the contract “appeared to comply 100% with FEMA regulations.”

Whitefish had little experience in utility work before Hurricane Maria devastated the US territory.

If FEMA does not pay PREPA for the job, the contract stipulates that the financially struggling utility has to come up with the money.

“It is important for all applicants for FEMA Public Assistance to understand and abide by federal requirements for grantee procurement,” FEMA said. “Applicants who fail to abide by these requirements risk not being reimbursed by FEMA for their disaster costs.”

The House Energy and Commerce Committee, the House Natural Resources Committee and Homeland Security’s Inspector General are investigating the deal.

“The size and terms of the contract, as well as the circumstances surrounding the contract’s formation, raise questions regarding PREPA’s standard contract awarding procedures,” the energy panel wrote to Whitefish, Newsweek reported.

As of Friday, about 72 percent of electric customers on the island of 3.4 million had no power — more than a month after Maria made landfall.

Whitefish’s main backer, HBC Investments, contributed tens of thousands of dollars to President Trump’s 2016 campaign.

Company founder Andy Techmanski has confirmed that his family knows Zinke — but they have denied that the interior secretary played any role in the no-bid contract award.

With Post wires