POTENTIAL ENERGY — House Republicans' signature energy bill hits the floor this week. Leaders hope the major policy push will spark unity and that proposed changes don’t sway support. The House Rules Committee takes up the measure this afternoon and will decide which of the 153 amendments that House members have submitted will actually get consideration and votes on the floor. A "structured rule" is expected for the energy bill, where a curated roster of amendments are allowed for action, instead of a total free-for-all under an open rule. With the four-vote GOP majority, leadership has to sweat the small stuff. Last week, lawmakers involved in the bill were trying to iron out details and suss out what kind of amendments might be on deck to head off headaches that could impact support of the bill. But Republican leaders have promised their conference a hands-on legislating experience, so expect a hefty list of amendments (at least Republican ones) cleared for the floor. Some topics still percolating last week include offshore oil and wind projects in the Gulf of Mexico, the high-profile Mountain Valley pipeline and fracking in the Delaware River Basin. Fracking or packing? In Pennsylvania's Delaware River Basin, two GOP lawmakers are facing off with competing proposals: one from Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.) to put Congressional weight behind a fracking ban in the region and another from Freedom Caucus Chair Scott Perry (R-Pa.) that would bar local commissions from issuing local regulations relating to fracking. Sunshine State: Florida Republicans, including Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-Fla.), have concerns about offshore projects, for both aesthetic and safety reasons, with the 2010 Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico still fresh on their minds more than a decade later. The Virginias: West Virginians and Virginians will be at odds over the proposed 300-mile Mountain Valley pipeline. Rep. Carol Miller (R-W.Va.) and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) are laser focused on getting the pipeline built, but Rep. Morgan Griffith (R-Va.) is trying to block the project, which would cross through Virginia and has sparked eminent domain issues. Permitting’s path forward: Plenty of Republicans are hoping to have energy permitting, one big focus of this bill, be part of negotiations over raising the debt ceiling, as Sarah and Jordain reported last week. Senate sneers: While energy permitting proposals have legs in both chambers, the House’s sweeping energy package won’t have momentum in the Senate. Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) already called it a “nonstarter” and “a wish list for Big Oil, gutting important environmental safeguards.” Our friends at E&E News have a great rundown of potential friction: Amendments could scramble House GOP energy bill, from Kelsey Brugger, Jeremy Dillon, Emma Dumain
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