An Examination of the Transportation Security Administration’s Fiscal Year 2025 Budget

Wed, 15 May 2024 18:30:00 GMT

Subcommittee hearing. $11.8 billion budget request.

Witness:
  • David Pekoske, Administrator, Transportation Security Administration
  • House Homeland Security Committee
    Transportation & Maritime Security Subcommittee 310 Cannon
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Examining the Roles of the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, Export-Import Bank of the United States, and Millennium Challenge Corporation

Wed, 15 May 2024 18:00:00 GMT

Subcommittee hearing.

Chair Coons

Witnesses:
  • Scott Nathan, Chief Executive Officer, U.S. International Development Finance Corporation
  • Reta Jo Lewis, President and Chair, Export-Import Bank of the United States
  • Alice Albright, Chief Executive Officer, Millennium Challenge Corporation

The U.S. International Development Finance Corporation requests $1 billion. In FY2023, DFC committed $3.7 billion for climate financing.

EXIM requests $130.1 million for administrative resources plus $15.0 million in program budget. The EXIM FY 2025 Budget Request will support an estimated $11.3 billion in new authorizations. EXIM requests an exemption from its default rate calculation for defaults on the development of nuclear power projects and for the entire China and Transformational Export Products program, which includes renewable energy, storage, and efficiency.

EXIM currently has more than $1.6 billion in clean energy and climate infrastructure projects in the FY 2024 pipeline. The updated climate change mitigation project classes now include projects related to energy storage, grid efficiency, battery production and recycling, clean hydrogen and ammonia production and storage, low emission manufacturing, zero and low emission transport, and clean energy minerals and ores.

MCC’s FY 2025 budget proposal to Congress includes $937 million in discretionary funding. From promoting conservation activities in Mozambique or delivering low-carbon economic development models in Kosovo, to supporting countries’ efficient energy transition by expanding renewable energy in Indonesia, MCC helps many of the world’s most vulnerable communities address the impacts of climate change in alignment with its climate strategy.

  • Senate Appropriations Committee
    State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs Subcommittee 138 Dirksen
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Examining the Fiscal Year 2025 State and Foreign Operations Budget Request for Africa

Wed, 15 May 2024 18:00:00 GMT

Subcommittee hearing on the $7.9 billion foreign operations budget request for Africa.

Witnesses:
  • Molly Phee, Assistant Secretary, Bureau of African Affairs, Department of State
  • Monde Muyangwa, Assistant Administrator, Bureau of Africa, U.S. Agency for International Development
  • House Foreign Affairs Committee
    Africa Subcommittee 2172 Rayburn
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Examining the President’s FY 2025 Budget Request for the Bureau of Land Management and National Park Service

Wed, 15 May 2024 14:15:00 GMT

On Wednesday, May 15, 2024, at 10:15 a.m., in Room 1324 Longworth House Office Building, the Subcommittee on Federal Lands will hold an oversight hearing titled “Examining the President’s FY 2025 Budget Request for the Bureau of Land Management and National Park Service.” The BLM budget request is $1.56 billion and the NPS discretionary budget request is $3.58 billion.

The FY 2025 BLM budget request proposes $53.1 million for the Renewable Energy Management program to support siting, leasing, processing rights-of-way applications, and oversight of renewable energy projects and transmission lines on BLM-managed public lands. In addition, the request for the BLM includes $2.1 million in Deferred Maintenance and CapitalImprovements for Zero Emission Vehicles (ZEVs)to support vehicle fleet lifecycle replacement, fleetrequirements analysis, charging infrastructure planning and deployment, and fleet capabilities assessments.

  • House Natural Resources Committee
    Federal Lands Subcommittee 1324 Longworth
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President’s Budget Request for the National Park Service for Fiscal Year 2025 and Pending Legislation

Wed, 15 May 2024 14:00:00 GMT

The purpose of this hearing is to examine the President’s budget request for the National Park Service for Fiscal Year 2025 and to receive testimony on the following bills:

  • S. 2620, to establish the Chesapeake National Recreation Area as a unit of the National Park System, and for other purposes;
  • S. 2742, to establish the Fort Ontario National Monument in the State of New York as a unit of the National Park System, and for other purposes;
  • S. 2743, to amend the John D. Dingell, Jr. Conservation, Management, and Recreation Act to designate as a component of the National Heritage Area System the Finger Lakes National Heritage Area in the State of New York, and for other purposes;
  • S. 2784, to amend the Dayton Aviation Heritage Preservation Act of 1992 to adjust the boundary of the Dayton Aviation Heritage National Historical Park, and for other purposes;
  • S. 3195, to designate the General George C. Marshall House, in the Commonwealth of Virginia, as an affiliated area of the National Park System, and for other purposes;
  • S. 3241, to establish the Grand Village of the Natchez Indians and Jefferson College as affiliated areas of the Natchez Historical Park, and for other purposes;
  • S. 3251, to modify the boundary of the Lincoln Home National Historic Site in the State of Illinois;
  • S. 3474, to redesignate the Hulls Cove Visitor Center at Acadia National Park as the “George J. Mitchell, Jr., Visitor Center”;
  • S. 3534, to authorize the Pines Foundation to establish the Fire Islands AIDS Memorial, and for other purposes;
  • S. 3542, to amend the Atchafalaya National Heritage Area Act to modify the boundary of the Atchafalaya National Heritage Area, and for other purposes;
  • S. 3543, to establish the Historic Greenwood District—Black Wall Street National Monument in the State of Oklahoma, and for other purposes;
  • S. 3568 / H.R. 3448, to amend chapter 3081 of title 54, United States Code, to enhance the protection and preservation of America’s battlefields;
  • S. 4129, to contribute funds and artifacts to the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library in Medora, North Dakota;
  • S. 4209, to provide greater regional access to the Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument in the State of Maine, and for other purposes;
  • S. 4216, to establish the Ocmulgee Mounds National Park and Preserve in the State of Georgia, and for other purposes;
  • S. 4218, to designate the visitor center for the First State National Historical Park to be located at the Sheriff’s House in New Castle, Delaware, as the “Thomas R. Carper Visitor Center”;
  • S. 4222, to adjust the boundary of the Mojave National Preserve in the State of California to include the land within the Castle Mountains National Monument;
  • S. 4227, to amend the California Desert Protection Act of 1994 to expand the boundary of Joshua Tree National Park;
  • S. 4228, to redesignate the Cottonwood Visitor Center at Joshua Tree National Park as the “Senator Dianne Feinstein Visitor Center”;
  • S. 4259, to require the Secretary of the Interior to conduct a study to assess the suitability and feasibility of designating certain land as the Lahaina National Heritage Area, and for other purposes;
  • H.R. 359, to establish Fort San Gerónimo del Boquerón in Puerto Rico as an affiliated area of the National Park System, and for other purposes;
  • H.R. 2717, to authorize the National Medal of Honor Museum Foundation to establish a commemorative work on the National Mall to honor the extraordinary acts of valor, selfless service, and sacrifice displayed by Medal of Honor recipients;
  • H.R. 4984, to direct the Secretary of the Interior to transfer administrative jurisdiction over the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium Campus to the District of Columbia so that the District may use the Campus for purposes including residential and commercial development, and for other purposes.
Witness:
  • Michael A. Caldwell, Associate Director, Park Planning, Facilities, and Lands, National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior
  • Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee
    National Parks Subcommittee 366 Dirksen
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A Review of the President’s Fiscal Year 2025 Budget Request for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Bureau of Reclamation

Wed, 15 May 2024 14:00:00 GMT

Subcommittee hearing. The Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 Budget provides $7.2 billion for the Civil Works program of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The fiscal year 2025 proposal for the Bureau of Reclamation is $1.6 billion.

Chair Patty Murray

Witnesses:
  • Michael L. Connor, Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works
  • Lieutenant General Scott A. Spellmon, Chief Engineers for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
  • Camille Calimlim Touton, Commissioner, Bureau of Reclamation

Civil Works FY 2025 budget justification information

The President’s Budget for Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 for the Army Corps of Engineers Civil Works program reflects the administration’s priorities to grow the nation’s economy, decrease climate risk for communities, increase ecosystem resilience to climate change, and promote environmental justice in disadvantaged communities in line with Justice40.

In developing the Budget, consideration was given to advancing three key objectives: 1) decreasing climate risk for communities and increasing ecosystem resilience to climate change based on the best available science; 2) promoting environmental justice in underserved and marginalized communities and Tribal nations in line with the Justice40 Initiative and creating good paying jobs that provide the free and fair chance to join a union and collectively bargain; and 3) strengthening the supply chain. The FY 2025 Budget investments will work to confront climate change by reducing flood risk, restoring ecosystems, and promoting community resilience across the nation. The Corps is working to integrate climate preparedness and climate resilience planning in all of its activities, such as by helping communities reduce their potential vulnerabilities to the effects of climate change and variability.

The climate crisis is challenging Reclamation’s ability to both produce energy and sustain reliable water delivery. The Nation faces undeniable realities that water supplies for agriculture, fisheries, ecosystems, industry, cities, and energy are confronting stability challenges due to climate change. Reclamation’s projects address the Administration’s conservation and climate resilience priorities through funding requests for the WaterSMART program, funding to secure water supply to wildlife refuges, and proactive efforts through providing sound climate science, research and development, and clean energy. To address these challenges, Reclamation has implemented its Climate Change Adaptation Strategy, which affirms Reclamation will use leading science and engineering to adapt climate-based situations across the West.

Reclamation’s FY 2025 budget for Research and Development (R&D) programs includes $22.6 million for the Science and Technology Program, and $7.0 million for Desalination and Water Purification Research—both of which focus on Reclamation’s mission of water and power deliveries. Climate change adaptation is a focus of Reclamation’s R&D programs, which invests in the production of climate change science, information and tools that benefit adaptation, and by yielding climate-resilient solutions to benefit management of water infrastructure, hydropower, environmental compliance, and water management.

Reclamation owns 77 hydroelectric power plants. Reclamation operates 53 of those plants to generate approximately 14 percent of the hydroelectric power produced in the United States. Each year on average, Reclamation generates approximately 40 million megawatt hours of electricity and collects over $1.0 billion in gross power revenues for the Federal Government. Reclamation’s FY 2025 budget request includes $4.5 million to increase Reclamation hydropower capabilities and value, contributing to Administration clean energy and climate change initiatives and enhancing water conservation and climate resilience within the power program. Reclamation’s Power Resources Office oversees power operations and maintenance, electric reliability compliance, and strategic energy initiatives.

  • Senate Appropriations Committee
    Energy and Water Development Subcommittee 138 Dirksen
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Budgeting for the Storm: Climate Change and the Costs to National Security

Wed, 15 May 2024 14:00:00 GMT

Full committee hearing.

Witnesses:
  • Dennis V. McGinn, VADM USN Ret., Former Assistant Secretary Of The Navy For Energy, Installations, And Environment, And Former Deputy Chief Of Naval Operations For Warfare Requirements And Programs
  • Tim Gallaudet, Ph.D., RDML USN Ret., Former Oceanographer Of The Navy, And Former Assistant Secretary Of Commerce For Oceans And Atmosphere
  • Erin Sikorsky, Director, The Center for Climate and Security, And The International Military Council On Climate and Security
  • Rick Dwyer, Executive Director, Hampton Roads Military And Federal Facilities Alliance
  • Mackenzie Eaglen, Senior Fellow, American Enterprise Institute [Republican witness]

The Fiscal Year 2025 Environmental Protection Agency Budget

Wed, 15 May 2024 14:00:00 GMT

On Wednesday, May 15, 2024, at 10:00 a.m. (ET) in 2123 Rayburn House Office Building, the Subcommittee on Environment, Manufacturing, and Critical Materials will hold a hearing entitled “The Fiscal Year 2025 Environmental Protection Agency Budget.”

Hearing memo

Witness:
  • Michael S. Regan, Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

The proposed FY 2025 budget for the EPA provides $11 billion and 17,145 full-time employees to support the Agency’s mission of protecting human health and the environment. This includes more than 2,000 new employees to address the Agency’s priorities and work with our partners across the Nation.

The FY 2025 Budget prioritizes tackling climate change with the urgency that science demands. EPA’s Climate Change Indicators website presents compelling and clear evidence of changes to our climate reflected in rising temperatures, ocean acidity, sea level rise, river flooding, droughts, heat waves, and wildfires. Recent natural disasters, like the devastating wildfire in Maui, Hawaii, the hazardous smoke and air pollution stemming from summer wildfires, and the catastrophic flooding in the West, reinforce the significance of EPA’s role in addressing and mitigating effects of climate change nationally and in our local communities. Resources in the Budget support efforts to mitigate and adapt to the impacts of the climate crisis while spurring economic progress and creating good-paying jobs. Both climate change mitigation and adaptation are essential components of the Agency’s strategy to reduce threats and impacts of climate change. The Budget empowers EPA to work with partners to address the climate crisis by reducing GHG emissions, building resilience in the face of climate impacts, and engaging with the global community to respond to this shared challenge. In FY 2025, EPA will drive reductions in emissions that significantly contribute to climate change through regulation of GHGs, climate partnership programs, and support to tribal, state, and local governments. The Agency will accomplish this through the transformative investments in the IRA, IIJA, and our annual appropriation. In FY 2025 and beyond, EPA will ensure its programs, policies, regulations, enforcement and compliance assurance activities, and internal business operations consider current and future impacts of climate change.

The Budget includes an increase of $77.5 million and 40.6 FTE above the FY 2024 ACR, for a total of $187.3 million and 256.7 FTE, for the Climate Protection Program to tackle the climate crisis at home and abroad through an integrated approach of regulations, partnerships, and technical assistance. The increase would enable EPA to take strong action on CO2 and methane, as well as high-global warming potential climate pollutants, such as hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), restore the capacity of EPA’s climate partnership programs, and strengthen EPA’s capacity to apply its modeling tools and expertise across a wide range of high priority work areas including supporting U.S. participation in the Paris Agreement and the Climate-Macro Interagency Technical Working Group. Resources also are requested for EPA to continue to implement regulations in FY 2025 to enhance reporting of GHG emissions from U.S. industrial sectors, including methane emissions from the oil and natural gas sector.

Also included in this increase is $5 million for EPA to provide administrative support to implement a historic $27 billion Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, enacted through the IRA. EPA recently released funding opportunities for three grant competitions: the $14 billion National Clean Investment Fund, the $6 billion Clean Communities Investment Accelerator, and the $7 billion Solar for All competition.4 With enhanced administrative support provided by the additional funding request, EPA will be able to more effectively and efficiently administer competitive grants to mobilize financing and leverage private capital for clean energy and climate projects that reduce GHG emissions with an emphasis on projects that benefit low-income and disadvantaged communities.

The Agency is requesting an additional $68.5 million and 46.8 FTE for a total of $185.9 million and 370.3 FTE for the Federal Vehicle and Fuels Standards and Certification Program. This includes the development of analytical methods, regulations, and analyses, to support climate protection by controlling GHG emissions from light-, medium-, and heavy-duty vehicles. In FY 2025, EPA will begin implementing a final rulemaking under the Clean Air Act to establish new GHG emissions standards for heavy-duty engines and vehicles beginning with Model Year (MY) 2027. EPA will invest significant resources to address a myriad of new technical challenges to support two sets of long-term rulemakings, which will include added light-duty vehicle and heavyduty vehicle testing and modeling capabilities at the National Vehicle and Fuel Emissions Laboratory (NVFEL). EPA also will begin implementing the multi-pollutant emissions standards, including for GHG emissions, for light- and medium-duty vehicles beginning with MY 2027 and extending through and including at least MY 2030.

Acting domestically to reduce GHG emissions is an important step to tackle the climate crisis; however, environmental protection is a shared responsibility that crosses international borders, and climate change poses a threat that no one government can solve alone. The Budget includes an additional $18.1 million and 16 FTE to support tackling the climate crisis abroad. Through a collaborative approach with international counterparts, EPA will enhance capacity building programs for priority countries with increasing GHG footprints, to enable stronger legislative, regulatory, and legal enforcement. To this end, President Biden has ambitiously laid out a path, by 2030, for the United States to cut GHG emissions by at least half from 2005 levels showing our international partners that America is doing its part to reduce global emissions. In FY 2023, EPA implemented 10 international climate engagements resulting in individual partner commitments or actions to reduce GHG emissions, adapt to climate change, or improve resilience in a manner that promotes equity, building on the work of eight engagements in FY 2022. The Agency will continue to engage both bilaterally and through multilateral institutions to improve international cooperation on climate change. These efforts help fulfill EPA’s commitment to Executive Order 14008: Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad.

Tackling the climate crisis depends not only on the Agency’s ability to mitigate GHG emissions but also the capacity to adapt and deliver targeted assistance to increase the Nation’s resilience to climate change impacts. As part of a whole-of-government approach, EPA will directly support federal partners, tribes and indigenous communities, states, territories, local governments, environmental justice organizations, community groups, and businesses as they anticipate, prepare for, and adapt to the impacts of climate change. In FY 2022, EPA assisted 110 federally recognized tribes and 242 states, territories, local governments, and communities in taking such actions. The FY 2025 Budget includes an additional $19.3 million and 14.5 FTE for climate adaptation efforts to increase resilience of EPA programs and strengthen the adaptive capacity of tribes, states, territories, local governments, communities, and businesses. In FY 2025, EPA will continue to implement the updated version of its Climate Adaptation Action Plan as well as 20 Climate Adaptation Implementation Plans developed by the EPA program and regional offices. These plans focus on five priority actions the Agency will take by FY 2026 to increase human and ecosystem resilience as the climate changes and disruptive impacts increase. To support the economic revitalization of coal, oil, gas, and power plant communities (Energy Communities), the Budget requests an additional $5 million and 3 FTE for stakeholder engagement and cross-agency coordination, including resources to increase the number of Rapid Response Teams (RRTs) from three in FY 2023 to at least 10 by the end of FY 2025.

To advance work on climate change modeling, an additional $3 million is requested across multiple programs to support the Agency’s participation in the Climate-Macro Interagency Technical Working Group and the Assessments of Federal Financial Climate Risk Interagency Working Group. Further, the Agency will continue development of open-source data and economic models, including sector-specific cost models, that assess the macroeconomic and fiscal impacts of climate change and the risk of extreme weather events.

  • House Energy and Commerce Committee
    Environment, Manufacturing, and Critical Materials Subcommittee 2123 Rayburn
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Understanding First Street Flood Modeling

Tue, 14 May 2024 16:00:00 GMT

First Street’s Chief Science Officer, Dr. Ed Kearns, explains how we created our climate-driven flood risk model and how it provides the most accurate view of flood risk.

Register to learn:

  • Why our compound, physics-based Flood Model (FS-FM) is how to accurately measure flood risk.
  • How we have implemented our Flood Model (FS-FM) Model and the key data inputs we used.
  • Understanding how our model delivers accurate flood risk and damage estimates for every property in the US, now and 30 years into the future

Field Hearing: Hunting, Fishing, and Outdoor Recreation on America’s Federal Lands

Mon, 13 May 2024 19:00:00 GMT

On Monday, May 13, 2024, at 2:00 p.m. (CDT), the Subcommittee on Federal Lands will hold an oversight field hearing titled “Improving Access and Opportunities for Hunting, Fishing, and Outdoor Recreation on America’s Federal Lands.” The hearing will examine barriers that sportsmen and women face to accessing our federal lands and commonsense solutions that promote greater hunting, fishing, and outdoor recreation opportunities.

This hearing will be held at The Steakhouse and Lodge, 15860 T Bone Lane, Hayward, Wisconsin.

Witnesses:
  • Rob Stafsholt, State Senator, New Richmond, Wisconsin
  • Henry Schienebeck, Executive Director, Great Lakes Timber Professionals Association, Rhinelander, Wisconsin
  • Luke Hilgemann, Executive Director, International Order of T. Roosevelt
  • Tom Dougherty, President, Voyageur Country Houseboat Operators Association, International Falls, Minnesota
  • Duane Taylor, Director of Safe and Responsible Use Programs, Motorcycle Industry Council, Specialty Vehicle Institute of America, Recreational Off-Highway Vehicle Association
  • House Natural Resources Committee
    Federal Lands Subcommittee
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