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Apr 17, 2026
Environment

House Passes Permitting Reform Bills to Cut the Red Tape Holding Back American Manufacturing and Economic Growth

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Congressman Brett Guthrie (KY-02), Chairman of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, celebrated the House passage of legislation to cut unnecessary and burdensome requirements under the Clean Air Act, support domestic manufacturing and energy production, and ensure American communities and manufacturers aren’t penalized for pollution they did not create.

In order to unleash American energy, strengthen our electricity grid, and grow our manufacturing base, it’s essential that undue permitting requirements are not standing in the way of innovation. For years, certain unnecessary Clean Air Act requirements have posed costly burdens for manufacturers and energy producers that have led to higher costs for hard-working families. Today’s passage of these bills is an important step toward supporting greater affordability.

H.R. 6398, the Reducing and Eliminating Duplicative Environmental Regulations Act (RED Tape Act) eliminates an outdated EPA review requirement for environmental impact studies when other agencies are already doing the work, and H.R. 6409, the Foreign Emissions and Nonattainment Clarification for Economic Stability Act (FENCES Act) protects states from being penalized for foreign emissions they cannot control.

“Energy and Commerce Republicans are delivering commonsense legislation that addresses the burdensome requirements holding back American energy and manufacturing. The RED Tape Act eliminates an outdated and redundant review requirement for the EPA, while the FENCES Act ensures American communities and manufacturers aren't penalized for pollution they did not create,” **said Chairman Guthrie. **“Together, these bills provide foundational permitting reforms our communities need to onshore manufacturing and create family-sustaining jobs. Thank you to Congressman Joyce and Congressman Pfluger for their work on these vital pieces of legislation.”

“The passage of the RED Tape Act is a critical step toward restoring efficiency and predictability in the federal permitting process. Unnecessary and duplicative regulations drive up costs, delay projects, and prevent necessary development that would benefit our workforce, businesses, and constituents,” said Congressman Joyce. “As energy demands rise, an efficient permitting process will become even more essential to meeting our energy needs, unleashing American energy dominance, and strengthening our position in the global race for critical minerals and advanced manufacturing.”

“The passage of my FENCES Act is a win for American businesses and workers who have been unfairly penalized for pollution beyond their control. By ensuring that foreign emissions and natural events, such as wildfires, are not counted against air monitoring data, this bill brings long-overdue fairness and certainty to the permitting process,” said Congressman Pfluger. “This means fewer delays, lower costs for consumers, and more confidence for businesses looking to invest and create jobs. It is a practical, commonsense fix that protects our economy and the integrity of our air quality standards.”

BACKGROUND:

H.R. 6398, the RED Tape Act—Rep. Joyce (PA-13)

  • The RED Tape Act removes the duplicative requirement in Section 309 of the Clean Air Act that directs EPA to assess and provide feedback on EISs prepared by other agencies under the National Environmental Policy Act for federal construction projects, significant federal actions, and proposed regulations.

  • In the decades since NEPA and this obscure CAA provision were enacted, federal agencies responsible for preparing EIS documents have developed considerable expertise assessing the impacts of their actions under NEPA. EPA is regularly involved in the NEPA review process as a cooperating agency, making the secondary review under Section 309 unnecessary, duplicative, and inefficient.

  • In its 2025 decision in Seven County Infrastructure Coalition vs. Eagle County, Colorado, the Supreme Court ruled that upstream and downstream impacts of a federal action fall outside the scope of an EIS under NEPA. In light of this decision, EPA’s separate review and comment on broader environmental impacts of proposed federal action are no longer appropriate.

H.R. 6409, the FENCES Act—Rep. Pfluger (TX-11)

  • Congress has always recognized that pollution originating outside our borders shouldn’t penalize American communities. That’s why the Clean Air Act allows states to adjust their air quality plans when foreign emissions prevent them from meeting federal standards. However, guidance from EPA under the previous administration narrowed the relief, limiting it to only human-caused emissions from abroad.

  • The FENCES Act restores the original intent of the law. It clarifies that all foreign emissions, whether natural or man-made, are excluded from consideration when determining whether a state meets national air quality standards or when reviewing new facility permits.

  • The bill allows states to account for foreign emissions earlier in the regulatory process, instead of forcing them to wait until the very end and risk costly delays or federal sanctions.

  • Currently, it is rare for EPA to grant states relief for foreign emissions in the National Ambient Air Quality Standards process. The current provision only applies to a state’s final State Implementation Plan. States should not be penalized for foreign emissions beyond their control; this bill would expand the 179B provision to cover attainment designations and not just final SIPs.



Apr 16, 2026
Energy

Chairman Latta Delivers Opening Statement at Subcommittee on the Department of Energy FY2027 Budget

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Congressman Bob Latta (OH-05), Chairman of the Subcommittee on Energy, delivered the following opening statement at today’s hearing on the Department of Energy’s FY2027 Budget.

Subcommittee Chairman Latta’s opening statement as prepared for delivery:

“Welcome to today’s hearing on the Department of Energy’s Fiscal Year 2027 budget and welcome back, Secretary Chris Wright, to the Energy Subcommittee of the Energy and Commerce Committee.

“Almost 14 months ago, you inherited a department that was not serving the strategic energy needs of the nation.

“The previous Administration lacked a realistic national energy security strategy. They wasted billions of taxpayer dollars reducing reliable energy and making our energy systems ill-prepared to meet this historic moment of the next generation economy.

“After more than a year at the helm of our Energy Department, things look very different.

“Under your leadership, our nation’s energy strategy prioritizes core responsibilities of energy and national security, reliable power, affordability, and economic growth.

“You’ve charted a path to ensure U.S. leadership in future technologies that are reshaping the global order.

“Finite taxpayer resources have been shifted to focus on abundant, reliable energy expansion. You’ve harnessed DOE’s computing power to put AI to use for societal benefit.

“You’ve accelerated work on nuclear technologies, increased collaboration to secure the grid during emergencies, and increased resources on our nuclear deterrent.

“You’ve also refocused the Department’s loan program on energy expansion and reliability.

“Most of these actions are reflected in DOE’s proposed budget.

“These efforts couldn’t come at a more important time.

“International conflicts and decisive military actions by the Trump Administration to protect our country have put increased pressure on ensuring a secure and reliable energy system.
While DOE has diligently worked to focus on essential energy and security priorities, more work remains.

“Affordability continues to be a key concern facing American families.

“We’d like to get your perspective on the impacts on oil prices from the conflict with Iran, and what the prospects for more stable supplies would mean.

“And we should also unpack the forces behind higher energy costs.

“Average utility bills rose by 11 percent in 2025 after increasing by 29 percent in the four years prior, and substantially higher across our nation’s bluest states.

“In fact, recent reports from the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab confirm far-left policies are driving price increases that are burdening households and businesses.

“We should examine how misguided policies leave our communities vulnerable when they need electricity the most, and what DOE is doing about that.

“Recent weather events during Winter Storm Fern exposed the risks of overreliance on weather dependent energy.

“DOE’s decisive 202(c) orders and effective emergency planning were critical to protect against blackouts, ultimately saving lives and preventing billions of dollars in economic damage.

“While mismanaged public policies disrupt our power sector, historic projections of demand growth from data centers and reshoring manufacturing continue to climb.

“Data centers alone could consume up to 17 percent of total electricity, which is also 60 percent higher than estimates projected in 2024.

“Importantly, DOE has taken several steps to ensure data centers can connect to the grid in a way that drives prices down and does not burden ratepayers with additional costs.

“This subcommittee has spent considerable time examining this historic load growth and what type of energy system is needed to fuel data center demand.

“Without fail, experts across the field have testified that the answer is dispatchable, reliable, and affordable supplies of baseload power.

“In recognition of these needs, the Department has prioritized dispatchable resources that can power next-generation technologies and keep the lights on when we need it most.

“Alongside these efforts, the Department has focused on ushering in a nuclear renaissance.

“This ranges from your work to accelerate the development of American nuclear fuel infrastructure and of reprocessing used fuel to your work to demonstrate more new reactor designs.

“We should examine how your work will dovetail with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission commercial licensing to provide a robust safety process for nuclear expansion.

“While the previous Administration sought to end the use of fossil fuels, your Department has unleashed American energy, like liquefied natural gas, and reversed unnecessary regulations that attack fossil fuel use.

“I look forward to a discussion on how your energy and technology priorities will benefit the American people.

“I yield back the balance of my time.”



Apr 16, 2026
Hearings

Energy Subcommittee Holds Hearing on the Department of Energy FY2027 Budget

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Congressman Bob Latta (OH-05), Chairman of the Subcommittee on Energy, led a hearing titled The Fiscal Year 2027 Department of Energy Budget.

“This subcommittee has spent considerable time examining this historic load growth and what type of energy system is needed to fuel data center demand,” said Chairman Latta. “Without fail, experts across the field have testified that the answer is dispatchable, reliable, and affordable supplies of baseload power. In recognition of these needs, the Department has prioritized dispatchable resources that can power next-generation technologies and keep the lights on when we need it most.”

Watch the full hearing here.

Below are key excerpts from today’s hearing:

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Congressman Rick Allen (GA-12): “Nuclear energy plays a vital role, and I'm proud to highlight that my district is home to Plant Vogtle, the nation's largest and most advanced clean nuclear energy facility, with Units 3 and 4 now fully operational. Nuclear energy is critical for our nation's energy security, and I'm glad that the Trump Administration is promoting nuclear energy. I look forward to continuing to work with you on deploying our nuclear energy capabilities.

“The refocused Office of Energy Dominance Financing is committed to the responsibility of deploying capital to projects that meaningfully contribute to energy security and lower energy costs for Americans. These are projects that can be built quickly and start making a real difference, generating electricity and a return on investment alike. Mr. Secretary, how can the EDF be utilized to expand existing nuclear plants, gas generating plants, and grid components to build our capacity and usher forward the next generation of reactors?”

Secretary Wright: “Two of our early loans from the Energy Dominance Finance program are for nuclear plant restarts, both the Palisades plant in Michigan and the formerly Three Mile Island, which will be rechristened the Crane Clean Energy Center. Those are EDF loans from the Department of Energy in partnership with solid corporate partners that are leading the effort and funding with equity. We're just their debt partners coming along with them.

“EDF loans will almost certainly be part of the first five or ten new reactors that are built in this country. Commercial lenders will be right there along with us, and after we get that ball rolling again, I think the commercial capital markets will fill that role nicely. But there is an important role for us at the start. We need key equity partners, and we need the right projects. The enthusiasm is high, and I believe we'll get the nuclear ball moving again.”

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Congressman John James (MI-10): “What we saw during Winter Storm Fern should be a wake-up call for Michigan, because when the grid was under maximum stress, the truth became very clear: reliability is not theoretical. It's tested in moments like these.

“Look at New England at the peak of the storm. They weren't relying on wind and solar. They were burning fuel oil for 35 percent of their power, natural gas for 32 percent, and even garbage and wood to keep the lights on. Wind produced just 2 percent. Solar, effectively zero. Now think about that, even if you doubled wind capacity, you're talking about 4 percent. If you doubled solar, you're still at zero percent during a winter storm. These are not reliable sources when you need them the most.

“And let's be honest about the environmental reality: burning archaic fuel oil, wood, and garbage for power is far worse for the environment than modern natural gas or nuclear energy.
That's not the example we want to follow in Michigan, but that's exactly the path that Lansing's net-zero mandates are pushing us toward. They are forcing reliable thermal generation off the grid while flooding the interconnection queue with intermittent wind and solar that clearly don't perform during peak demand.”

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Congressman Craig Goldman (TX-12): “Mr. Secretary, thank you very much for being here. Let's talk about affordability. My friends across the aisle like to talk about gas prices, but more importantly, gas taxes. Every state is not equal, is it?”

** Secretary Wright:** “No, and the differences are pretty dramatic. We've made maps on this, and they look like political maps. You want to know where gasoline is expensive, where electricity is expensive — look in the blue states. There are political choices across this country in blue states to make electricity expensive and to make gasoline expensive.”



Chairmen Guthrie and Hudson Announce Hearing on Updating Satellite Regulations

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Yesterday, Congressman Brett Guthrie (KY-02), Chairman of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, and Congressman Richard Hudson (NC-09), Chairman of the Subcommittee on Communications and Technology, announced a hearing titled SAT Streamlining Act: Modernizing Satellite Licensing for the Final Frontier.

“American innovators are at the leading edge of technological advancements that will serve our families and businesses for years to come. Unfortunately, our laws governing satellite technologies often do not reflect our ability and shared goal to continue that progress,” said Chairmen Guthrie and Hudson. “We look forward to a conversation about modernizing our regulations so that bureaucracy and red tape do not prevent another great American century.”

Subcommittee on Communications and Technology hearing titled SAT Streamlining Act: Modernizing Satellite Licensing for the Final Frontier.

WHAT: Subcommittee on Communications and Technology hearing on updating satellite regulations.

DATE: Tuesday, April 21, 2026

TIME: 2:00 PM ET

LOCATION: 2123 Rayburn House Office Building

This hearing will focus on the following bill:

H.R. 8255, the SAT Streamlining Act (Rep. Brett Guthrie)

This notice is at the direction of the Chairman. The hearing will be open to the public and press and will be livestreamed online at energycommerce.house.gov. If you have any questions concerning this hearing, please contact Noah Jackson with the Committee staff at Noah.Jackson@mail.house.gov. If you have any press-related questions, please contact Daniel Kelly at Daniel.Kelly@mail.house.gov.



Apr 15, 2026
Energy

Chairmen Guthrie and Latta Announce Hearing Conducting Oversight of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Congressman Brett Guthrie (KY-02), Chairman of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, and Congressman Bob Latta (OH-05), Chairman of the Subcommittee on Energy, announced a hearing titled Nuclear Regulatory Commission: Oversight of Activities, Priorities, and Fiscal Year 2027 Budget.

“Nuclear energy plays a critical role in our nation’s energy security, delivering the reliable power generation our families and businesses need and helping to establish our nation as a global leader in energy production.” said Chairmen Guthrie and Latta. “This hearing will provide our members the opportunity to hear firsthand from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission on issues ranging from implementation of the ADVANCE Act and the President's executive orders to the licensing of advanced reactors, as well as the steps the Commission is taking to ensure its regulatory processes are efficient, predictable, and supportive of American energy dominance.”

Subcommittee on Energy hearing titled Nuclear Regulatory Commission: Oversight of Activities, Priorities, and Fiscal Year 2027 Budget

WHAT: Subcommittee on Energy hearing to conduct oversight of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

DATE: Wednesday, April 22, 2026

TIME: 10:00 AM ET

LOCATION: 2123 Rayburn House Office Building

This notice is at the direction of the Chairman. The hearing will be open to the public and press and will be live streamed online at energycommerce.house.gov.If you have any questions concerning the hearing, please contact Seth Ricketts with the Committee staff at Seth.Ricketts@mail.house.gov. If you have any press-related questions, please contact Ben Mullany at Ben.Mullany@mail.house.gov.



Apr 15, 2026
Health

Health Subcommittee Holds Legislative Hearing Exploring Bills that Uplift the Public Health of our Country

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Congressman Morgan Griffith (VA-09), Chairman of the Subcommittee on Health, led a hearing titled Healthier America: Legislative Proposals to Improve Public Health.

“Public health initiatives are essential to improving health outcomes, lowering long-term costs, and moving toward a healthier nation. Today, we discussed ten bills that address the public health and wellness of our country,” said Chairman Griffith. “Investments in initiatives such as disease surveillance, community-based programs, and health education enable more effective responses to both everyday health challenges and emerging threats. By prioritizing prevention, we can help individuals make informed choices and empower them to act sooner. Over time, these efforts also help reduce strain on our health care system by decreasing avoidable hospitalizations and emergency care.”

Watch the full hearing here.

Below are key excerpts from today’s hearing:
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Congressman Gus Bilirakis (FL-12) on H.R. 8205, the Accelerating Access to Critical Therapies for ALS Reauthorization Act of 2026: “Thank you for being here and sharing your story. It's good to see you. Of course, as you know, my family is personally impacted by neurodegenerative diseases, and I care deeply about these issues. Your testimony notes how investing in ALS research also means investment in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. In addition to reauthorizing the ACT for ALS, do you have further recommendations for how Congress can promote innovation for these diseases?” Ms. Abrevaya & Mr. Wallach: “Thank you so much for the question and all of your support. I think one of the examples I shared earlier, one of the great outcomes from the first five years of ACT for ALS is that it incentivized therapeutics companies to take a treatment that is working for ALS and to test it on another neurodegenerative disease. I think that's the real opportunity ahead of us in the next 15 years, is really appreciating the scientific link between FTD, Alzheimer's, [and] Huntington's. All neurodegenerative diseases have cellular similarities, have protein dysfunction similarities, and yet I don't think, to date, we're doing enough to leverage what we're discovering for one disease to see if it would work for another.”

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Congressman Troy Balderson (OH-12) on the Digital Health Screeners Act of 2026: “I'm encouraged that this Subcommittee has noticed the discussion draft I'm leading to codify the FDA's updated general wellness guidance. This is a critical first step toward providing the agency with clear direction on how wearable technologies can be used appropriately as screening tools, while maintaining strong safety guardrails. Mr. Quashie, can you discuss more broadly the health benefits wearables can provide to our constituents and follow up with that? And how can they play a role in empowering patients to better track and manage their own health outcomes?” Mr. Quashie: “Thank you for that, Congressman. Chair Griffith actually had a great use case for wearables earlier. He was wearing a device. He provided some data about his own body. He was able to act on that data and went to his clinician to get more information and more services. That is a perfect use case.”

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Congresswoman Mariannette Miller-Meeks (IA-01) on H.R. 4541, the EARLY Act Reauthorization of 2025: “This program works because it leverages partnerships between federal agencies, providers, and community-based organizations to deliver education that is both clinically accurate and culturally appropriate. That's especially important when we consider persistent disparities in breast cancer outcomes among minority and rural populations. From an oversight perspective, reauthorization gives this committee the opportunity to ensure that resources are being used efficiently, that outreach is data driven, and that programs are reaching the populations most at risk. We should also be thinking about how efforts like the EARLY Act can better integrate with broader care delivery reforms—whether that's improving care coordination, supporting survivorship planning, or leveraging technology to expand access to information and services. Young women diagnosed with breast cancer often face more aggressive disease and unique challenges, from delayed diagnosis to complex treatment decisions that can impact fertility, employment, and long-term health. Ensuring they have access to timely information and support is not just good medicine, it's smart health policy. The EARLY Act reflects a bipartisan commitment to prevention, patient education, and closing gaps in care.”



Apr 15, 2026
Health

Chairman Griffith Delivers Opening Statement at Subcommittee on Health Legislative Hearing Discussing Solutions to Improve Public Health of Americans

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Congressman Morgan Griffith (VA-09), Chairman of the Subcommittee on Health, delivered the following opening statement at today’s hearing titled Healthier America: Legislative Proposals to Improve Public Health.

Subcommittee Chairman Griffith’s opening statement as prepared for delivery:

“Today we will examine policy proposals to improve public health.

“Public health initiatives are essential to improving health outcomes, lowering long-term costs, and moving toward a healthier nation.

“Investments in initiatives such as disease surveillance, community-based programs, and health education enable more effective responses to both everyday health challenges and emerging threats.

“Early detection saves lives. By prioritizing prevention, we can help individuals make informed choices and empower them to act sooner.

“Over time, these efforts also help reduce strain on our health care system by decreasing avoidable hospitalizations and emergency care.

“Today we will be discussing ten bills that address the public health and wellness of our country.

“One of these bills is H.R. 4348, led by Representative Chris Smith from New Jersey and Representative Doggett of Texas. This bill would reauthorize the Kay Hagan Tick Act, which developed a national strategy to address vector-borne diseases like Lyme disease, improve surveillance, and coordinate federal programs.

“Representative Smith has been a Lyme champion for decades, as New Jersey is one of the states most impacted by the disease.

“The bill is named after Senator Kay Hagan, who passed away from complications of a tick-borne virus.

“Tick-borne illnesses are spreading quickly in our country.

“There are many tick-borne illnesses, and we have only scratched the surface in understanding these diseases that continue to have devastating impacts on our communities.

“Virginia consistently reports some of the highest annual rates of Lyme disease in the United States, with my district of Southwest Virginia having some of the highest rates of Lyme and other tick-borne illnesses.

“Virginia Tech in my district is doing research on of Lyme disease and other tick-borne illnesses in our communities.

“We will also be discussing H.R. 8205, the Accelerating Access to Critical Therapies (ACT) for ALS Act led by Representative Ken Calvert from California and Representative Quigley from Illinois, which would reauthorize the ACT for ALS program that supports initiatives to accelerate research and expand access to investigational treatments for people living with ALS and other neurodegenerative diseases.

“Although progress has been made, there is still no cure for ALS.

“A swimming friend of mine in Roanoke Valley, Rob Lawson, died from his battle with ALS in 2022.

“Former Virginia House of Delegates Republican Raymond R. Robrecht, who was one of my mentors, died from ALS in 1994.

“Eric Dane, best known as Dr. Sloan, also known as 'McSteamy,' in the show Grey’s Anatomy, came to many of our offices last year to advocate for ALS and share his experience. Unfortunately, he lost his battle with the disease earlier this year.

“We hear these heartbreaking stories too often in our communities, as this is regrettably the reality for many who are diagnosed with rare diseases and neurodegenerative diseases.

“I trust reauthorizing this bill can help bring hope to those families afflicted by it.

“Another bill is H.R. 3747, the Accelerating Access to Dementia and Alzheimer’s Provider Training (AADAPT) Act led by Representative Balderson from Ohio and Representative Barragan from California.

“This legislation would reauthorize a program that helps increase access to specialty care services in rural and underserved areas by training clinicians through Project ECHO models, of which there are multiple in Virginia.

“Even though the language of some of the community health center bills are still being negotiated, I would be remiss not to mention their critical role that community health centers play in supporting our nation’s health.

“Many of the other bills we will examine place a strong emphasis on prevention, physical activity and nutrition education, research and innovation, workforce development, and other initiatives to uplift our nation’s public health.

“I am eager to hear from our witnesses about how we can work to improve health outcomes across the country.”



Apr 15, 2026
Environment

Chairman Guthrie Delivers Floor Remarks on Permitting Reform Bills

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Congressman Brett Guthrie (KY-02), Chairman of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, delivered remarks on the House floor regarding H.R. 6409, the FENCES Act, HR 6398, the RED Tape Act, and HR 6387, the FIRE ACT. Together, these three bills are essential to the work that House Republicans are doing to pass the permitting reform needed to unleash American energy, lower prices, and support domestic manufacturing.

Chairman Guthrie's remarks on permitting reform legislation, as prepared for delivery:

“I rise in support of H.R. 6409, the FENCES Act, HR 6398, the RED Tape Act, and HR 6387, the FIRE ACT.

“These three bills are an essential part of the Committee’s broader efforts on permitting reform and align with White House permitting priorities, which include modernizing the Clean Air Act. A lot has changed since 1990, the last time the Clean Air Act got a substantive overhaul, and some parts of the law have become outdated, contributing to the regulatory gridlock that is stifling American growth and innovation.

“A lot has changed since 1990, the last time the Clean Air Act got a substantive overhaul, and some parts of the law have become outdated, contributing to the regulatory gridlock that is stifling American growth and innovation.

“These bills are foundational to our permitting reform efforts because they illustrate ways we can protect public health and the environment while removing outdated provisions that are slowing energy production and manufacturing, ultimately preventing job creation.

“The Energy and Commerce Committee has held multiple hearings this Congress on the process for establishing and implementing national air quality standards and improving the preconstruction permitting program without sacrificing environmental protections. Some of the most expensive and significant barriers in the permitting process are the result of the law’s outdated provisions.

“What’s worse, these burdensome requirements fail to address the most significant sources of pollution and create disincentives for companies to invest in cost-efficient and effective technology that would actually improve air quality.

“In the U.S. it takes 80% longer to permit projects than elsewhere in the world. America’s outdated permitting system costs manufacturers in the U.S. approximately $7.90 billion each year. While a reasonable level of permitting is of course needed, without common sense reforms, our nation risks falling behind our adversaries like China.

“Notably, over 70% of projects require Clean Air Act permits, which have the most burdensome approval process of any permitting requirement. Notably, over 70% of projects require Clean Air Act permits, which have the most burdensome approval process of any permitting requirement. These three bills remove regulatory uncertainty and bureaucratic hoops that impact what and where job creators build new businesses – but they do not change the underlying environmental protections in the law.

“The FENCES Act, introduced by Congressman Pfluger, ensures that states and local communities are not penalized for foreign air emissions emanating outside of the U.S.

“The FENCES Act clarifies that all foreign emissions, whether natural or man-made, are not considered when determining whether a state meets national air quality standards.

“The FENCES Act protects manufacturers and communities from unnecessary compliance burdens caused by events beyond their control, such as pollution from China or foreign wildfires or dust storms, while upholding environmental standards under the Clean Air Act.

“The RED Tape Act, introduced by Congressman Joyce, eliminates a duplicative environmental review for projects already subject to NEPA environmental review. The duplicative review leads to additional delays and costs in the NEPA process.

“The FIRE Act, introduced by Congressman Gabe Evans and co-led by Congressman Adam Gray, updates the Clean Air Act to address the biggest threat in air pollution this country faces today, wildfires. Bipartisan legislation ensures that states are not punished for prescribed burns or emissions they cannot control.

“Prescribed burns are the most effective tool to decrease the severity of wildfires and public health problems associated with wildfire smoke. Despite the widespread acceptance of the benefits of prescribed burns, they are underutilized across the U.S. due to perverse regulatory burdens under current air quality laws.

“I urge my colleagues to join me in supporting H.R. 6409, the FENCES Act, H.R. 6398 the RED Tape Act, and H.R. 6387 the FIRE Act. These bills provide common-sense solutions and long needed updates to the Clean Air Act.”



Chairman Bilirakis Delivers Opening Statement at Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade Hearing on the Semiconductor Ecosystem and Supply Chain

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Congressman Gus Bilirakis (FL-12), Chairman of the Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade, delivered the following opening statement at today’s hearing on the semiconductor ecosystem and supply chain.

Subcommittee Chairman Bilirakis’s opening statement as prepared for delivery:

“From consumer devices and household items to AI applications, semiconductors, or chips, are critical components to today’s society and are essential to our national and economic security. Semiconductors come in many forms: logic and memory, leading-edge and legacy—each serving distinct and indispensable functions across the economy.

“For decades the U.S. has dominated the world stage of semiconductors - leading in areas such as global revenue, manufacturing capacity, and semiconductor design, to name a few. But that leadership is no longer guaranteed. American semiconductor manufacturing capacity has declined over 25 percent since 1990. Our adversaries, particularly China, are actively seeking to unseat us from global leadership and disrupt our supply chains.

“Through my work on the Energy and Commerce and the Select Committee on China, I’ve seen firsthand the strengths and strategic vulnerabilities of the U.S. semiconductor ecosystem that defines our strategic competition with China. While the U.S. remains a leader in semiconductor design, China is rapidly scaling its own capabilities, backed by significant state subsidies, and maintains a dominant position in the rare earth materials critical to chip production.

“At the same time, demand for semiconductors is being transformed by artificial intelligence. AI applications, such as use in data centers, are among the most critical use cases of semiconductors in today’s society. AI is the leading use case for semiconductors, and the AI surge is responsible for over half of total semiconductor revenue—potentially reaching 500 billion dollars this year, and 1 trillion dollars by 2030. AI is a critical driver of economic growth—ceding global leadership or leaving our semiconductor supply chains vulnerable to disruption at the hands of China could be catastrophic for U.S. leadership in AI.

“The good news is that we have not ignored these emerging threats. Between Congressional and Executive action, including actions in this Committee, there have been a panoply of actions to strengthen U.S. global semiconductor leadership. This hearing will also examine those solutions and consider what other actions may be needed.”