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Energy & Environment — House GOP announces anti-ESG working group

Rep. Bill Huizenga (R-Mich.) asks questions during a House Financial Services Committee oversight hearing of the largest U.S. banks on Wednesday, September 21, 2022. (The Hill)

The House’s Republican majority is launching a working group to push back on environmental, social and governance investing. Meanwhile, the Treasury Department expands which electric vehicles can claim a tax credit, and the Interior Department announces millions toward tribal water settlement. 

This is Energy & Environment, your source for the latest news focused on energy, the environment and beyond. For The Hill, we’re Rachel Frazin and Zack Budryk.

Republicans join to fight ‘threat’ of ESG investing 

House Republicans are creating a new working group to further their pushback against environmental, social and governance (ESG) investing.  

A press release from the House Financial Services Committee announcing the group said it will be aimed at combating what they described as a “threat to our capital markets.” 

What’s the plan? The group will be led by Rep. Bill Huizenga (R-Mich.). 

It will seek to “develop a comprehensive approach” to the ESG issue and “hold Biden’s rogue regulators accountable,” Financial Services Committee Chairman Patrick McHenry (R-N.C.) said in the release. 

The press release did not specify how it would do so, and a spokesperson did not immediately respond to questions from The Hill. 

Where did this start? ESG investing is a broad term for attempts to invest ethically and can include actions by the government, investment firms and banks or individuals.  

Proponents of ESG argue that it is possible to do good for the planet and well financially at the same time. A 2021 meta-analysis from New York University found ESG to be generally associated with better financial performance for stock holders. 

Read more about the group here. 

Treasury expands eligibility for EV tax credit  

The Biden administration will expand eligibility for an Inflation Reduction Act-enabled tax cut for electric vehicles, the Treasury Department announced Friday. 

So what’s changing? Under the expanded eligibility, Tesla’s five-seat Model Y, the Volkswagen ID.4 and General Motors’s Cadillac Lyriq will all be allowed under the $80,000 price cap as crossover SUVs. 

Companies such as Tesla and GM had previously lobbied for a more expansive eligibility standard to allow their models to qualify. Tesla cut the price of its Model Y vehicle 20 percent in January, which would make it eligible for the tax credit even before the expansion.

In January, CEO Elon Musk tweeted that it was “messed up” that the five-seat version of the Model Y was ineligible under the earlier standards.

The Hill has reached out to Tesla for clarification on whether the announcement will affect the price cut. 

Read more about the expansion here. 

WATER RELIEF

The Biden administration will distribute $580 million to 15 Native American tribes toward settling water rights claims, the Interior Department announced Thursday night. 

In 1908, the Supreme Court ruled in its Winters v. United States decision that tribes have the right to as much water as necessary for their reservations to be self-sufficient. Congress had enacted 34 settlements involving water rights as of November 2021. Despite the seniority conferred by the so-called Winters doctrine, the burden of determining the details has often been placed on individual stakeholders. 

Read more about the announcement here. 

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