Overnight Energy & Environment — Virginia lawmakers block ex-Trump EPA chief
Welcome to Tuesday’s Overnight Energy & Environment, your source for the latest news focused on energy, the environment and beyond. Subscribe here: digital-release.thehill.com/newsletter-signup.
Today we’re looking at Virginia’s state Senate voting down former EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler for a state office, a House hearing on Big Oil’s climate pledges and the Postal Service defending its vehicle-purchasing plans.
For The Hill, we’re Rachel Frazin and Zack Budryk. Write to us with tips: rfrazin@digital-release.thehill.com and zbudryk@digital-release.thehill.com. Follow us on Twitter: @RachelFrazin and @BudrykZack.
Let’s jump in.
Wheeler rejected along party lines
Virginia lawmakers officially rejected the nomination of former Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) head Andrew Wheeler, Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s (R) nominee for natural resources secretary, the first rejection of a state Cabinet nominee in over 15 years.
The state Senate, where Democrats hold a two-seat majority, voted the nomination down along party lines 21-19 on Tuesday.
What was the problem? Wheeler, a former coal lobbyist, was widely criticized by environmentalists during his tenure at the EPA under then-President Trump, where he oversaw the rollback of numerous environmental rules and backed a new regulation barring the use of scientific research that did not make data public. He defended his record before the state Senate in January, acknowledging human-caused climate change and saying his environmental history had been misrepresented by the press.
The rejection was widely expected, particularly after a panel within the state senate voted to remove Wheeler’s name from a list of Cabinet nominees.
How we got here: Before that vote, Wheeler had made his case at a largely friendly hearing in January, where his cordial interactions with a Senate committee suggested he might be able to win bipartisan support.
State Sen. Joe Morrissey (D), who has been known to break with his party, suggested after Wheeler’s hearing that he would be open to backing him, which would have deadlocked the chamber and thrown it to Lt. Gov. Winsome Sears (R) for a tiebreaker vote. However, Morrissey joined the rest of his colleagues Tuesday in voting against him.
“After hearing grave concerns from our communities, stakeholders, and organizations — as well as Mr. Wheeler’s former colleagues at the EPA — we cannot in good conscience confirm such an alarming choice,” the Senate’s Democratic caucus said in a statement following the vote.
Read more about the vote here.
Dems say Big Oil’s climate pledges insufficient
House Democrats took aim at major oil companies’ climate pledges during an Oversight Committee hearing on Tuesday after company board members declined to appear.
The hearing replaced the committee’s initial plans to have board members from ExxonMobil, BP, Chevron and Shell testify after the committee said last week that four out of five invitees declined to appear on the scheduled date.
Instead, the lawmakers brought in experts and advocates, who criticized the companies’ promises as insufficient as they anticipate continued use of fossil fuels.
The lawmakers, too, criticized the companies, saying that plans to continue and in many cases expand fossil fuel production are incompatible with fighting climate change.
According to the Environmental Protection Agency, burning fossil fuels is the biggest contributor to climate change.
The background: The companies have said that they want to reduce the “carbon intensity” of their fossil fuels — meaning that the fuels themselves will release less carbon dioxide into the air.
Panel witness Michael Mann, a Pennsylvania State University atmospheric science professor, said that with increased production, doing this would be similar to eating more potato chips but selecting a lower-fat variety.
“They love to talk about how they are going to decrease the carbon intensity of their fossil fuels. That’s sort of like your doctor telling you that you need to cut fat from your diet and so you switch to 40 percent reduced fat potato chips, but you eat twice as many of them,” Mann said.
“That doesn’t help … and that’s effectively what fossil fuel interests are doing,” he added.
Chevron and Exxon particularly came under fire for including releases of planet-warming gasses only from their operations, and not from the burning of their products to power cars or generate electricity, in their carbon neutrality pledges.
The fuels’ use, not their production, is responsible for the vast majority of their emissions.
“That would be like an automaker pledging to eliminate emissions from their manufacturing, but doing nothing to improve their cars’ fuel efficiency,” said Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.).
Read more about the hearing here.
DeJoy defends plan to buy gas-powered trucks
Postmaster General Louis DeJoy on Tuesday defended the Postal Service’s (USPS) plan to purchase a predominantly gas-powered fleet of up to 165,000 trucks rather than invest in electric vehicles, citing “dire financial condition.”
“Our commitment to an electric fleet remains ambitious given the pressing vehicle and safety needs of our aging fleet as well as our dire financial condition,” DeJoy said in a press release.
DeJoy said the proposed action, in accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), includes an initial order for 5,000 electric vehicles. However, absent such funding, DeJoy said the USPS “must make fiscally responsible decisions that result in the needed introduction of safer and environmentally cleaner vehicles for the men and women who deliver America’s mail.”
He said the USPS is “committed to completing the NEPA process,” but noted that “we are compelled to act prudently in the interest of the American public.”
“However, that responsibility should not be mistaken for an ambivalent commitment to operating a cleaner postal vehicle fleet for our country. As with everything else we now do, we will be resolute in making decisions that are grounded in our financial situation and what we can realistically achieve,” DeJoy said.
Read more from The Hill’s Rachel Scully.
WHITE HOUSE HAPPENINGS
President Biden on Tuesday said the creation of a facility to build chargers for electric vehicles in Tennessee is part of a comeback for American manufacturing and a sign of the post-pandemic jobs resurgence.
“We’re seeing the beginnings of an American manufacturing comeback,” Biden said in remarks at the White House. “The world’s at an inflection point, things are going to change in a big way, and this is one of those transition moments.”
Tritium, an Australian company, announced on Tuesday it is building a U.S. manufacturing plant that will begin production in fall 2022 and have the initial capacity to build over 10,000 fast-charging units per year.
The plant will have room to expand to building 30,000 units per year and plans to employ more than 500 people over the next five years.
Biden called the Tritium announcement good news for the planet and said “it’s going to deliver greater dignity and a little more breathing room to workers and their families and it’s going to have a ripple effect beyond, far beyond, one state.”
Biden said this funding will help ensure that the U.S. leads the world on electric vehicles.
“China has been leading that race up until now, but this is about to change because America’s building convenient, reliable, equitable, national public charging networks,” he said.
And, coming up…
Tomorrow, Biden is expected to be part of a roundtable with utility CEOs to discuss his Build Back Better Agenda, which is currently stalled in Congress.
Tom Kuhn, president of the Edison Electric Institute, said in a statement that a delegation of the trade group’s member companies “representing investor-owned electric companies from across the country, will meet with President Biden and senior Administration officials to make the case that clean energy tax credits will deliver significant long-term benefits for electricity customers. “
“We also will outline our focus on building new transmission and energy infrastructure critical for bringing greater resilience and more clean energy to customers and for helping other sectors of our economy, including the transportation sector, reduce their emissions, while keeping electricity affordable for all customers,” Kuhn said.
Read more about Biden’s Tuesday remarks from The Hill’s Alex Gangitano.
LANDER OUT
Eric Lander, President Biden’s science adviser, resigned on Monday evening after an internal investigation uncovered evidence that he bullied subordinates.
In his resignation letter to Biden, Lander, who heads the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) within the White House, took responsibility for his actions and said he was “devastated” for causing hurt to colleagues.
“It is clear that things I said, and the way I said them, crossed the line at times into being disrespectful and demeaning, to both men and women. That was never my intention,” Lander wrote in the letter. “Nonetheless, it is my fault and my responsibility. I will take this lesson forward.”
Lander said his resignation would be effective Feb. 18 to allow for an “orderly transfer.” The role is subject to Senate confirmation and had been elevated to Cabinet level under the Biden administration. It was not immediate clear who would take over for Lander when he departs.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki said that Biden accepted Lander’s resignation.
“The President accepted Dr. Eric Lander’s resignation letter this evening with gratitude for his work at OSTP on the pandemic, the Cancer Moonshot, climate change, and other key priorities,” Psaki said in a statement. “He knows that Dr. Lander will continue to make important contributions to the scientific community in the years ahead.”
Read more from The Hill’s Morgan Chalfant.
ON TAP FOR TOMORROW
- The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee will hold a hearing on the implementation of a 2020 public lands law known as the Great American Outdoors Act. Officials from the Interior and Agriculture departments will testify.
- The Senate Environment and Public Works Committee will hold a hearing looking at bills on nuclear energy and nuclear waste
WHAT WE’RE READING
- Is the California Coalition Fighting Subsidies For Rooftop Solar a Fake Grassroots Group?(Inside Climate News)
- Poll: Citizens globally blast politicians’ lack of action to combat climate change (Politico)
- “I Have Nowhere To Go”: This Woman Lost Her New Jersey Apartment Due To Ida’s Flooding. Government Officials Just Evicted Her From Her Temporary Housing. (BuzzFeed News)
- Monarch butterflies show hints of a comeback out West, but experts are cautious (Popular Science)
- Germany taps Greenpeace chief as climate envoy (Reuters)
ICYMI
- Army plans microgrids, electric vehicle fleet in first climate strategy
- FEMA rolls out text feature to help Americans find open shelters during disasters
- Energy panel Republicans grill Biden Interior nominee on leasing in rare second hearing
- OPINION | “To counter Russian gas, look to the Eastern Mediterranean,” by Frank Fannon, former Assistant Secretary of State for Energy Resources.
And finally, something ON-beat and offbeat: EPA administrator Michael Regan takes the Daily Show
That’s it for today, thanks for reading. Check out The Hill’s energy & environment page for the latest news and coverage. We’ll see you Wednesday.
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