ELECTRIC VEHICLES: California’s Democratic senators push President Joe Biden to follow their state’s lead and “set a date by which all new cars and passenger trucks sold be zero-emission vehicles.” (Reuters)
ALSO:
• Amazon-backed electric vehicle startup Rivian announces a plan to build more than 10,000 fast chargers across the U.S. and Canada by 2023. (The Verge)
• Advocates say Massachusetts won’t reach its climate goals unless people start driving less, and that current plans overemphasize electric vehicles. (Energy News Network)
OVERSIGHT: The House schedules a week of climate and energy hearings, including sessions on Democrats’ proposed clean energy overhaul, sustainable aviation and low-carbon buildings. (E&E News, subscription)
OFFSHORE WIND: Documents suggest federal officials were poised to approve the Vineyard Wind offshore project in June 2019 before the Trump administration called for additional review, raising questions of political interference. (E&E News, subscription required)
COAL:
• An investigation reveals how Georgia Power convinced regulators to approve pushing coal-ash clean-up costs onto ratepayers while also pursuing a plan that would perpetually risk contaminating drinking water in neighboring communities. (ProPublica/Georgia Health News)
• A Kentucky lawmaker introduces a bill to pause new permits for mountaintop coal removal until a federal study can examine its health effects. (E&E News, subscription)
NUCLEAR: A New Jersey appeals court rules state regulators properly awarded zero-emission credits to the state’s nuclear fleet, creating the annual subsidy of up to $300 million. (NJ.com)
UTILITIES:
• More than two dozen cities, counties and corporations submit comments to North Carolina regulators that critique Duke Energy’s 15-year power generation plan as including too few renewables and too many new gas plants at ratepayers’ expense. (Energy News Network)
• California utility PG&E is set to start moving ratepayers to a time-of-use plan next month where electricity is more expensive from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. each day. (San Francisco Chronicle)
• Connecticut regulators lambaste Eversource for its preparedness and response to Tropical Storm Isaias last summer and suggest the company could be fined. (Hartford Courant)
OIL & GAS:
• Documents show that California’s oil and gas regulator is failing to enforce pollution violations, and imposing small fines when it does. (ProPublica/Desert Sun)
• A perfume entrepreneur from Myanmar bought up $3.7 million of federal oil leases, then sold them to fellow immigrants at inflated prices, an investigation shows. (Reuters)
• Environmental groups call the Trump administration’s rush to grant permits to a massive oil refinery in the U.S. Virgin Islands “a textbook case of environmental injustice” that demands President Biden’s attention. (Inside Climate News)
PIPELINES:
• Less than 10% of the Keystone XL pipeline had been built when President Biden revoked a key permit for the project. (Reuters)
• Federal regulators’ review of a Massachusetts compressor station has industry analysts concerned that it could set a precedent for projects under review or to be proposed. (WBUR)
EFFICIENCY: A Vermont city is poised to enact a law requiring weatherization of apartment buildings. (Energy News Network)
CLIMATE: The U.S. and China discussed climate change during last week’s summit in Alaska, according to the State Department, but didn’t form a working group like a Chinese state report indicated. (Axios)
COMMENTARY:
• White-centered “climate anxiety” is “literally suffocating to people of color,” an environmental studies professor writes. (Scientific American)
• The communications director for the Carbon Neutral Cities Alliance writes in support of a “no-brainer” lawsuit that “aims to establish legal protections for Americans when using publicly owned land.” (The Hill)