Bipartisan measure affirms federal role in electrical transmission planning, axes permit and litigation timelines, assures oil/gas public lands leasing.
The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee has adopted a permitting reform bill that seeks to accelerate electric grid expansion, restrict litigation and trim timelines for energy and mineral mining proposals.
“The need for permitting reform has come up in almost every hearing that we’ve had this Congress,” Manchin said. “No matter what side of the fence you may be on, everyone knows it can’t happen unless we reform our permitting—how we do things. So, the time to act is now.”
Six Years to 150 Days
EPRA includes three judicial review revisions, most notably reducing deadlines for filing lawsuits against proposed projects or agency decisions from six years to 150 days.
The proposed bill installs a first-ever deadline for agencies to respond to court remand reviews within 180 days and requires courts to prioritize challenges to energy or mineral projects.
The bill would require the Department of the Interior (DOI) to hold lease sales in accordance with the Energy Policy Act of 2005, which requires quarterly sales for oil and gas leases on public lands and for offshore oil, gas, and wind every other year.
EPRA would require that DOI make at least 50 percent of leases, or at least 2 million acres, available for oil and gas before approving renewable energy proposals.
It mandates DOI hold offshore lease auctions of at least 60 million acres annually between 2025-29 rather than every other year. Geothermal energy leases would also be conducted annually.
The proposed measure requires DOI to begin reviewing lease applications within 90 days of submission and issue decisions within 90 days of completing environmental reviews.
EPRA would require agencies to verify the existence of minerals before permitting ancillary activities on claim sites.
The bill would mandate that DOE determine within 90 days of FERC final environmental reviews if exporting liquified natural gas (LNG) to a country lacking a free trade agreement with the United States is in the “public interest” or be automatically approved.
In January 2024, DOE “paused” LNG export permit reviews to refine what “public interest” means. On July 1, a federal judge stayed DOE’s LNG export “pause.”
Amendments Shot Down
Numerous amendments were offered during the July 31 Senate “business meeting,” or “markup,” where panelists get final shots to submit changes. Only one regarding forest restoration by Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.) was approved.
Sen. Josh Hawley’s (R-Mo.) failed amendment requiring FERC transmission siting be approved, not merely noticed, by regional transmission organizations (RTOs) and state planners would have essentially negated FERC’s Order No. 1920, which may be revised with 48 rehearing requests and three new members joining the five-seat FERC.
The committee deferred Sen. Lisa Murkowski’s (R-Alaska) amendment promoting small hydroelectric and hydrokinetic projects for rural communities until it can be discussed when EPRA is introduced for a floor vote.
“After more than a year of bipartisan negotiations …we are now one step closer to getting the bipartisan Energy Permitting Reform Act signed into law,” Barrasso said. “Our bill is a true, all-of-the-above energy policy—targeted, timely, and good for all Americans.”
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
Running For Office? Conservative Campaign Consulting – Election Day Strategies!