The disapproval resolutions were passed in accordance with the Congressional Review Act.
WASHINGTONâRepublicans have passed three resolutions to overturn a handful of environmental regulatory actions taken in the waning days of the Biden administration, the first of many such resolutions likely to be pursued by the current Congress.
The disapproval resolutions were passed in accordance with the Congressional Review Act (CRA). This allows Congress to repeal regulations issued within the past 60 days by a simple majority vote of both chambers.
Eleven Democrats joined all Republicans in voting for the resolution.
The regulation âamended energy conservation standards for gas-fired instantaneous water heaters.â
âHouse Republicans voted to end the Biden administrationâs radical ban on gas-fired water heaters,â House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said in a statement.
âThe American people made it clear they want lower costs and more choices, and we are keeping our promise to undo the damage of the last administration by cutting costs, protecting choice, and rejecting these damaging regulations.â
Six Democrats joined 214 Republicans in voting for the resolution.
The regulation was a result of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, one of President Joe Bidenâs major legislative accomplishments, which included investments in clean energy.
The rule ârequires the EPA to impose and collect an annual charge on methane emissions that exceed waste emissions thresholds specified by Congress.â
âHouse Republicans rolled back the disastrous natural gas tax imposed by Democrats,â Johnson said in a statement.
âThis overreach has driven up energy prices, hurt domestic natural gas production, and increased reliance on foreign energyâwithout delivering any so-called environmental benefit.
âHouse Republicans are leveraging the Congressional Review Act to support President [Donald] Trump in undoing the damage of the Biden administrationâs war on American energy.â
These House resolutions go to the Senate, where it takes only a simple majority to pass them; they are not subject to the 60-vote filibuster threshold that most legislation must clear.
The resolution is now pending before the House.
Critics characterized the rule as contributing to a âregulatory stranglehold.â
The rule requires âlessees and operators to submit an archaeological report with any oil and gas exploration or development plan they submitâ to the Interior Departmentâs Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM).
The CRA allows only one regulation to be repealed at a time.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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