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Posts tagged ‘The House Energy and Commerce Committee’

Repeal Wasteful $27 Billion Greenhouse Gas Reduction (Slush) Fund


By: Miles Pollard / March 20, 2024

Read more at https://www.dailysignal.com/2024/03/20/repeal-wasteful-27-billion-greenhouse-gas-reduction-slush-fund/

Steam—not a greenhouse gas—rising from heating system vents surrounds the U.S. Capitol Dome on a chilly Feb. 7 morning. (Photo: J. David Ake/Getty Images)

The House Energy and Commerce Committee is set to vote this week on the possible repeal of the $27 billion Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, which hasn’t been distributed yet. That taxpayer-funded giveaway to the ailing solar industry and environmental nongovernmental organizations lacks both sufficient accountability and utility. The fund is structured to pick winners and losers in the energy market, to subsidize Chinese companies that use forced labor, and to undermine the reliability of the power grid.

As Rep. Bob Latta, R-Ohio, said at an Axios clean energy roundtable on Tuesday, “When we’ve picked, we lose.”

The fund’s $27 billion would allocate grants only for renewable energy projects, which would disadvantage conventional energy producers (including nuclear), raise consumer costs, and create a slush fund for green special interests. All of this is in addition to the solar industry’s $37 billion in federal subsidies received between 2016 and 2022.

Since these tax subsidies largely benefit those with incomes high enough to install solar panels and benefit from the tax breaks, working-class and minority Americans have disproportionately shouldered the increased electricity prices that come from the cost of building out renewables and transmission infrastructure. In California alone, Pacific Gas and Electric rates have increased 127% over the past 10 years.

Some—such as Jennifer Hernandez, a leading environmental litigator in California who also teaches land use and environmental law at the University of California and Stanford Law School—equate these policies to a Green Jim Crow.

Additionally, Donna Jackson of the National Center for Public Policy Research testified before Congress that “creating higher energy costs is increasingly keeping [renters] out of homeownership.”

California, the state with the largest percentage of solar capacity, has residents who pay more than 29 cents per kilowatt-hour, almost double the state average of 16 cents per kilowatt-hour.  The fund intends to distribute $7 billion to select disadvantaged communities for solar panels, but even communities that do not receive grants see increased electricity prices.

Communities that would receive subsidized solar panels might be unable to sell excess electricity back to the grid. The Energy Information Administration has reported that, due to transmission line overload, California’s primary grid operator cut off or curtailed a record 2.4 million megawatt-hours of utility-scale wind and solar output in 2022, a 63% increase from 2021.

Additionally, due to payout restructuring from the California Public Utilities Commission, residential solar owners must now include the cost of transmission, leading to 75% of California rooftop-solar companies being at a high risk of bankruptcy. Already, more than 100 solar companies declared bankruptcy in 2023 as rooftop-solar sales are down between 66% and 83% since 2022.

Silicon Valley Bank, which financed 60% of those community solar deals and banked billions of dollars on these green investments, underwent a banking crisis and restructuring. Furthermore, even if these community projects fail, recipients have no obligation to return the funds.

To add insult to injury, 80% of solar components are coming from China. As such, solar panels purchased by the fund will help finance the Chinese Communist Party’s forced labor of Uyghurs, Kazakhs, Kyrgyzs, and Tibetans.

Congress passed the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act to stop slave labor from subsidizing the solar industry’s supply chain. However, a Commerce Department investigation found that companies are circumventing the act. Chinese companies are shipping solar panels to other Southeast Asian countries and then sending solar components on to America with false-origin paperwork.

Despite these findings, the Biden administration resumed importation from these illegal supply-chain products to continue the subsidy-fueled build-out of the U.S. solar industry. Moreover, the potential misuse of these funds is deeply concerning as politically favored projects of questionable viability are particularly suspected of funding mischief.

One can only hope that extremist environmental nonprofits such as the Climate Emergency Fund—supporters of which recently poured red powder on the U.S. Constitution and interrupted a conference at The Heritage Foundation in the name of climate change—will not be indirectly financed by the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund. (The Daily Signal is the news outlet of The Heritage Foundation.)

Furthermore, America has removed Chinese solar backup batteries from military bases due to security concerns. Importing compromised Chinese batteries, solar inverters, or synchronizers would be detrimental to national security.

If the Biden administration wanted ethical sourcing of solar panels and related material, it would allow for domestic extraction of the critical component minerals, reducing domestic dependence on authoritarian suppliers and creating American jobs.

America needs affordable, reliable, and secure energy sources. By repealing this fund, Congress, with HR 1023, can demonstrate its commitment to maintaining fiscal prudence, establishing a competitive and stable energy market, blocking financing of CCP forced labor, and supporting people who want affordable electricity rates in inflationary times.

Second committee advances ObamaCare repeal legislation


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Second committee advances ObamaCare repeal legislation / © Greg Nash

The House Energy and Commerce Committee advanced GOP legislation to repeal and replace ObamaCare, titled the American Health Care Act, on a party-line vote Thursday afternoon, after 27 hours of continuous debate.

The committee markup lasted from Wednesday morning to Thursday afternoon before it was finally approved by a vote of 31-23. Democrats dragged out the hearing by proposing a slew of amendments, all of which were rejected by Republicans.

The measure now goes to the House Budget Committee, with plans for a vote in the full House within several weeks. The House Ways and Means Committee passed its piece of the legislation early Thursday morning.

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“Today, the House took a decisive step forward in fulfilling a promise to the American people that has been years in the making: repealing and replacing Obamacare with affordable, patient-centered reforms. After conducting an open and transparent markup, we are proud to put forth a plan that represents a Better Way for patients and families,” said Energy and Commerce Chairman Greg Walden (R-Ore.). Democrats put up a fight for more than 24 hours, arguing that the GOP plan would result in the loss of health insurance coverage for millions.

They took issue with Republicans marking up the plan without a score from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), which will indicate how much the plan will cost and how many people could lose coverage under it.

“I would think that people would want to know if their constituents would lose their insurance before they vote for this bill today,” said Rep. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.).

Republicans downplayed the importance of having a CBO score before markup, saying one would be available before the floor vote. Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.) also argued that the CBO score on ObamaCare was off on its estimates, setting up an argument likely to be continued by Republicans if the numbers don’t come back positive.

Republicans shot down amendments from Democrats that would have removed a provision defunding Planned Parenthood, kept ObamaCare’s patient protections and changed the title of the bill to “Republican Pay More For Less Act.” Members also debated the merits of changing Medicaid to a per-capita cap system, with Democrats arguing it would result in a loss of benefits for low-income people.
Democrats weren’t the only ones offering amendments. Rep. Joe Barton (R-Texas) introduced an amendment that would have sped up the rollback of the Medicaid expansion, though he later withdrew it. It would have frozen the expansion by the end of the year, rather than the bill’s current 2020 deadline, and continued the federal match to states until 2023. Barton said the amendment, if adopted, would go a long way toward gaining the support of conservatives who oppose the GOP plan. He declined to tell reporters if he would offer the amendment once the plan made it to the House floor.
While the plan is on track to make it to the floor by the end of the month, it faces an uphill battle in the Senate. Several Republicans have come out against the bill, including some senators from expansion states who oppose the Medicaid rollback. Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) said the bill is “worse” than ObamaCare.
“Insurance rates could go up and Americans could have even less control,” he told ABC News Thursday.

Asked about the criticism from Cotton that the House is moving too fast, Scalise said at a press conference after the markup that Americans can’t wait. “American families have waited long enough for relief from ObamaCare,” he said. “We have run for years on the promise that if we had this opportunity, we would actually move forward to repeal and replace ObamaCare.”

Walden said he thought the markup was the longest the committee has ever had without a break.

“I haven’t found anybody who can find a longer continuous markup in the Energy and Commerce Committee,” he said. “I’ll leave it up to the historians to do the record check. It sure felt like the longest one I’ve ever been to.”
— This story was updated at 2:37 p.m.

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