Overnight Energy & Environment

Energy & Environment — <strong>Energy bills among first of new Congress</strong>

The 118th Congress begins. Meanwhile, Treasury issues a new guidance on electric vehicle tax credits and the EPA and Army Corps of Engineers finish new water regulations.  

Plus: An interview with Steven Donziger, an activist who rallies against Big Oil in Latin America. 

This is Overnight 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. Someone forward you this newsletter? Subscribe here. 

Oil reserve bills top initial GOP agenda

The 118th Congress kicked off today, though Republicans remain engaged in a lengthy battle over who will be House Speaker.  

Nevertheless, Rep. Steve Scalise (La.), a key Republican leader, put forward details on which bills Republicans are expected to take up first. Among the 11 initial bills are two related to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR): 


Read more about the opening Republican measures here, from The Hill’s Emily Brooks.  

ANOTHER LOOMING REPUBLICAN TARGET: ESG

Republicans are expected to crack down on environmental and socially conscious investing, known as ESG, with themselves now in the House majority this year.

Ok, but what is it? ESG, which stands for environmental, social and governance 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 see it as a way for people to help themselves do well financially by investing money into companies seen as having a positive impact, or that meet a set of environmental and social standards. 

Republicans argue that ESG could harm the fossil fuel industry, and that the government should not be providing incentives to foster it. The burning of fossil fuels is the main driver of climate change, so entities operating under this philosophy may not put as much money into this industry as they would have otherwise.  

Republicans have also raised concerns that money managers who take these factors into account may do so at the expense of profits for their clients.  

House GOP lawmakers will have oversight authority through which they can request or in some cases subpoena documents and conduct hearings on a wide range of topics they hope to examine.   

Read more about the anti-ESG push forthcoming here. 

Treasury delays EV tax credit stipulations

The Treasury Department and IRS announced last week that they are delaying restrictions on which electric vehicles can be eligible for tax credits under Democrats’ climate and tax bill, in addition to other policies regarding the tax credit.  

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) slammed the guidance, marking his latest disagreement with the Biden administration.  

The legislation, known as the Inflation Reduction Act, removed caps on how many electric vehicles would be eligible for consumer tax credits, but added new stipulations regarding the manufacturing of and sourcing of minerals for electric vehicle batteries.  

The law says that these stipulations will take effect when the Treasury issues guidance for their implementation, which was supposed to happen “not later than December 31.” 

But the Treasury said on Thursday that the guidance will not be ready until March and that in the meantime it will continue to use prior battery capacity requirements to determine if a vehicle can meet the credits.  

Industry stakeholders said that the minerals requirements was expected to be particularly difficult to meet and could hamper electric vehicle adoption in the short term.  

So what does Manchin have to say: Manchin, in a written statement on Thursday, slammed the Treasury’s announcement.  

Read more about the guidance here.  

Officials publish ‘middle-of-the-road’ water regs 

The Biden administration on Dec. 30, 2022, issued new regulations for the country’s wetlands and waterways. 

The regulations define which waters get federal protections that would require businesses to obtain a permit for activities like construction that could damage water quality — and which do not.  

This may be it for WOTUS regs: 

When it announced its intention to revise the nation’s water regulations in July 2021, the EPA said it would take a two-step approach, beginning with a “foundational rule” that would restore pre-Obama regulations and ending with a second rule that would “refine this regulatory foundation” and provide an “updated” definition of which waters are regulated.  

Recent years have seen a significant back-and-forth over which waters should be regulated with the Obama administration rules seen as stringent while Trump-era rules were not.  

The EPA said that its new rule restores protections that were in place prior to the Obama administration and said that it will strengthen important protections for drinking water sources. 

Mark Ryan, a former EPA attorney who worked on the Obama administration rules said that he expected the Biden rules to be “somewhat similar” to regulations from 1986 that were largely in place already after both the Obama and Trump rules faced difficulty in court.  

Read more about the new water regulations here.  

THE HILL INTERVIEWS ACTIVIST STEVEN DONZIGER 

Steven Donziger says he has no regrets amid a lengthy legal battle with Chevron that has won him support from Democrats in Congress who have pushed for his release from detention.   

To supporters, Donziger is a folk hero who stood up to the power of oil companies in Latin America and has now suffered a personal cost. 

To opponents — and in the eyes of the law, as it stands now — he’s a fraud who allegedly ghostwrote an Ecuadorian judge’s ruling ordering Chevron to pay $9.5 billion to farmers and Indigenous groups in the country. Donziger denies all allegations of fraud or misconduct in connection with the Ecuador case.  

The vast majority of his detention — more than 800 days — has been pretrial house arrest, longer than the six-month maximum sentence he eventually received.       

Though he’s out of detention now, Donziger expressed concern that he was a test case for what he called the corporate capture of American civil institutions by energy giants like Chevron, with a goal of silencing opposition.  

Read more about the case here.   

WHAT WE’RE READING

MORE FROM THE HILL

Lighter click: Rachel’s take on the speakership drama. 

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 tomorrow.