For Electronic Submission Guidelines, click here!

Amendments to H.R. 1 – Lower Energy Costs Act

Each amendment gets up to ten minutes of debate

Donalds (R-FL) – Amendment No. 1 – Requires a study on streamlining the regulatory approval timeline by examining certain licensing/permitting processes for other sources of energy under the jurisdiction of the Department of Energy – PASSED BY VOICE

Boebert (R-CO) – Amendment No. 2 – Adds a Sense of Congress expressing disapproval of the denial of Jordan Cove Project permits – VOTE REQUESTED

Crenshaw (R-TX) – Amendment No. 3 – Amends the Safe Drinking Water Act to clarify the requisite timeline for making a decision on the approval or disapproval of a State underground injection control program, and for other purposes – PASSED BY VOICE

Estes (R-KS) – Amendment No. 4 – Requires the Secretary of Energy to use an index-based pricing bid system when purchasing petroleum products for the SPR – PASSED BY VOICE

Hern (R-OK) – Amendment No. 5 – Expresses the sense of Congress disapproving of the proposed tax hikes on the oil and natural gas industry in the presidents fiscal year 2024 budget request – VOTE REQUESTED

Houlahan (D-PA) – Amendment No. 6 – Prohibits export or sale of petroleum products from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to China, North Korea, Russia, Iran or any country subject to sanctions imposed by the United States – PASSED BY VOICE

Jackson (R-TX) – Amendment No. 7 – Requires the EPA, in consultation with the DOE, to submit a report to Congress identifying and assessing existing regulations that have negatively affected domestic energy independence and increased energy cost for Americans – VOTE REQUESTED

Mace (R-SC) – Amendment No. 8 – Requires the Secretary of Energy to report annually on the ongoing assessments of critical energy resources and actions taken to strengthen supply chains to advance American energy security – PASSED BY VOICE

Molinaro (R-NY) – Amendment No. 9 – Requires a GAO study on how banning natural gas appliances will affect the rates and charges for electricity – VOTE REQUESTED

Palmer (R-AL) – Amendment No. 10 – Prohibits the Secretary of Energy from implementing its proposed rule regarding gas stoves, or any other rule that would limit consumer access to gas stoves – VOTE REQUESTED

Perry (R-PA) – Amendment No. 11 – Prohibits the Delaware River Basin Commission, Susquehanna River Basin Commission, and the Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin from finalizing,
implementing, or enforcing any regulations relating to hydraulic fracturing other than those issued by the State in which the regulation is to be implemented or enforced – VOTE REQUESTED

Perry (R-PA) – Amendment No. 12 – Repeals section 115 of the Clean Air Act – VOTE REQUESTED

Roy (R-TX) – Amendment No. 13 – Directs FERC to withdraw its policy statements titled “Certification of New Interstate Natural Gas Facilities’’ (87 Fed. Reg. 11548) and “Consideration of Greenhouse Gas Emissions in Natural Gas Infrastructure Project Reviews’’ (87 Fed. Reg. 14104) – PASSED BY VOICE

Schiff (D-CA) – Amendment No. 14 – Strikes section 10005 – NOT OFFERED

Barr (R-KY) – Amendment No. 15 – Amends the FAST Act to expand eligibility for FAST 41 permitting for projects related to the extraction, recovery, or processing of critical minerals, rare-earth elements, microfine carbon, or carbon from coal, coal waste, coal processing waste, pre- or post-combustion coal byproducts, or acid mine drainage from coal mines – PASSED BY VOICE

Boebert (R-CO) – Amendment No. 16 – Shortens the timetable to file a petition for judicial review of a permit, license, or approval of a major infrastructure project, such as a highway or public transit project, from 150 days to 90 days – PASSED BY VOICE

Crawford (R-AR) – Amendment No. 17 – Requires DOT to apply the One Federal Decision procedures to pipeline projects under NEPA review to streamline the environmental review/permitting process PASSED BY VOICE

Donalds (R-FL) – Amendment No. 18 – Requires a report on the current status of American uranium, how America’s uranium compares to the global supply of uranium in terms of quantity and quality, etc – PASSED BY VOICE

Escobar (D-TX) – Amendment No. 19 – Strikes Section 20103, which requires the Secretary of Interior to resolve any protest to a lease sale within 60 days – FAILED BY VOICE

Westerman (R-AR) (on behalf of Feenstra (R-IA) – Amendment No. 20 – Prohibits the Communist Party of China (or a person acting on behalf of the Communist Party of China) from acquiring any interest with respect to American farmland or any lands used for American renewable energy production – VOTE REQUESTED

Gluesenkamp Perez (D-WA) – Amendment No. 21 – Requires the Department of the Interior, Department of Agriculture, US Army Corps of Engineers, and Department of Commerce to determine technological needs for permitting programs and report them to Congress annually – PASSED BY VOICE

Westerman (R-AR) – Amendment No. 22 – Creates a national strategy for America to reshore mineral supply chains and challenge the CCP – PASSED BY VOICE

LaMalfa (R-CA) – Amendment No. 23 – Allows wildfire mitigation activities within 300 feet of a road on Federal lands to be carried out without regard to NEPA or ESA requirements – PASSED BY VOICE

LaMalfa (R-CA) – Amendment No. 24 – Expands the definition of “hazard trees” identified and removed along electric power lines as part of a utility’s vegetation management plan to trees within 50 feet, from
10 feet. Such plans will also be automatically approved after 60 days – PASSED BY VOICE

Leger Fernandez (D-NM) – Amendment No. 25 – Requires each local unit of the Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, and Forest Service to develop a plan to disseminate and advertise open civil service positions with functions relating to permitting and natural resources in their offices. Each plan shall include outreach to local high schools, community colleges, institutions of higher education, and any other relevant institutions – VOTE REQUESTED

Levin (D-CA) – Amendment No. 26 – Strikes Title V of Division B, to prevent the bill from repealing the Inflation Reduction Act’s reforms to the oil and gas leasing program – VOTE REQUESTED

Levin (D-CA) – Amendment No. 27 – Specifies that Division B shall not take effect until the Council on Environmental Quality, in consultation with affected Federal agencies, certifies that all agencies have the funding and staffing capacity to meet the Division’s new timelines for environmental review without reducing the quality of such review – FAILED BY VOICE

Luna (R-FL) – Amendment No. 28 – Requires GAO to publish a report on the impact of wind energy, including the adverse effects of wind energy on military readiness, marine environment, and tourism, before the Secretary of the Interior can publish or hold a lease sale for energy development in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico Planning Area, the South Atlantic Planning Area, or the Straits of Florida Planning Area – PASSED BY VOICE

Luna (R-FL) – Amendment No. 29 – Expresses the sense of Congress that major components of wind infrastructure, including turbines, are imported in large quantities from other countries including countries that are national security threats, such as the Government of the People’s Republic of China – PASSED BY VOICE

Ogles (R-TN) – Amendment No. 30 – Expresses the Sense of Congress that the royalty rate for onshore Federal oil and gas leases be 12.5% – PASSED BY VOICE

Ogles (R-TN) – Amendment No. 31 – Provides that any entity subject to the jurisdiction of the Government of the People’s Republic of China, or any entity that is owned by the Government of the People’s Republic of China may not acquire any interest with respect to lands leased for oil or gas under the Mineral Leasing Act, the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, and may not acquire claims subject to the General Mining Law of 1872 – VOTE REQUESTED

Perry (R-PA) – Amendment No. 32 – Adds a prohibition to sec. 20209 on contributions from CCP entities – PASSED BY VOICE

Perry (R-PA) – Amendment No. 33 – Adds a reporting requirement to sec. 20209 on non-Federal entities – PASSED BY VOICE

Perry (R-PA) – Amendment No. 34 – Adds to sec. 20305 an exception for certain actions under the Defense Production Act – VOTE REQUESTED

Smith (R-NJ) – Amendment No. 35 – Requires a Government Accountability Office study of sufficiency of the environmental review process for offshore wind – VOTE REQUESTED

Van Drew (R-NJ) – Amendment No. 36 – Requires the Government Accountability Office to publish a report on all potential adverse effects of wind energy development in the North Atlantic Planning Area – VOTE REQUESTED

Graves (R-LA) – Amendment No. 37 – Provides regulatory certainty by explicitly authorizing the common practice of NPDES general permits and providing for continuances during times of administrative delay – PASSED BY VOICE