HAPPY THURSDAY! Welcome to Overnight Energy, your source for the day’s energy and environment news. Please send tips and comments to Rachel Frazin at [email protected] . Follow her on Twitter: @RachelFrazin . Reach Zack Budryk at [email protected] or follow him at @BudrykZack .
Today we’re looking at the EPA’s reconstituted Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee, confirmations of Interior and NOAA officials and a report on the pandemic’s impacts on the Bureau of Land Management.
AFTER THE CASAC SACKINGS (CASACKINGS?): EPA announces new clean air advisors after firing Trump appointees
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The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced new members of a clean air advisory group after taking the unusual step of dismissing the panel’s prior members, who were appointed under the Trump administration.
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In a statement, the agency announced the seven members of the Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC), which provides independent advice on technical aspects of air quality standards.
Guess who’s back, back again. Two of the members are Trump appointees who returned to the committee after being dismissed by Administrator Michael ReganMichael ReganOVERNIGHT ENERGY: EPA announces new clean air advisors after firing Trump appointees | Senate confirms Biden pick for No. 2 role at Interior | Watchdog: Bureau of Land Management saw messaging failures, understaffing during pandemic EPA announces new clean air advisors after firing Trump appointees EPA to reconsider Trump decision not to tighten soot air quality standards MORE earlier this year.
James Boylan works in air protection at the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Mark Frampton is a professor emeritus in pulmonary and critical care at the University of Rochester Medical Center.
Some backstory: Other Trump administration committee picks came under scrutiny for industry ties.
Read more about the reconstituted panel here.
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FIRMLY CONFIRMED: Senate confirms Interior No. 2, NOAA administrator
Like a pencil, he’s No. 2: The Senate confirmed President BidenJoe BidenChinese apps could face subpoenas, bans under Biden executive order: report OVERNIGHT ENERGY: EPA announces new clean air advisors after firing Trump appointees | Senate confirms Biden pick for No. 2 role at Interior | Watchdog: Bureau of Land Management saw messaging failures, understaffing during pandemic Poll: Majority back blanket student loan forgiveness MORE’s pick for the No. 2 role at the Interior Department on Thursday with broad bipartisan support, but opposition from one progressive and a handful of Republicans.
Senators voted 88-9 to confirm Tommy Beaudreau as deputy Interior Secretary, with eight Republicans and Sen. Bernie SandersBernie SandersOVERNIGHT ENERGY: EPA announces new clean air advisors after firing Trump appointees | Senate confirms Biden pick for No. 2 role at Interior | Watchdog: Bureau of Land Management saw messaging failures, understaffing during pandemic Overnight Health Care: Takeaways on the Supreme Court’s Obamacare decision | COVID-19 cost 5.5 million years of American life | Biden administration investing billions in antiviral pills for COVID-19 Democratic senators press PhRMA over COVID-19 lobbying efforts MORE (I-Vt.) opposing the nomination.
The progressive didn’t want the nomination to progress…Sanders’s office told The Hill that the senator voted against Beaudreau because of his ties to oil companies.
Beaudreau has come under criticism from progressive groups for working with companies like French oil giant Total.
President Biden nominated Beaudreau after pulling back his previous nominee, Elizabeth Klein, amid reported opposition from Senate moderates.
I NOAA guy: The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) on Thursday got a Senate-confirmed leader for the first time since 2017.
The Senate approved Richard Spinrad’s nomination to lead the oceans and weather agency by a voice vote, signaling that his nomination was noncontroversial.
In addition to leading NOAA, Spinrad will also serve as the Commerce Department’s undersecretary for oceans and atmosphere.
Read more about Beaudreau’s confirmation here and Spinrad’s confirmation here.
MANAGING IT: Watchdog: Bureau of Land Management saw messaging failures, understaffing during pandemic
Keeping the majority of Bureau of Land Management (BLM) sites open during the coronavirus pandemic in 2020 resulted in “harmful consequences” including vandalism and damages to restrooms, according to a report issued this week by an Interior Department watchdog.
Faced with the Trump administration’s insistence that most BLM sites remain open, state and field offices said officials at the bureau’s headquarters were slow to provide full guidance, and that public messaging about the coronavirus pandemic was also frequently delayed.
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“For instance, one State office employee noted that guidance from BLM headquarters or the U.S. Department of the Interior was usually received after State-developed guidance was available,” the report stated. “This employee also commented that the State office created its own guidance instead of waiting for direction from BLM headquarters or the Department.”
Read more about the report here.
QUOTE OF NOTE: Sens. Lindsey GrahamLindsey Olin GrahamOVERNIGHT ENERGY: EPA announces new clean air advisors after firing Trump appointees | Senate confirms Biden pick for No. 2 role at Interior | Watchdog: Bureau of Land Management saw messaging failures, understaffing during pandemic Graham, Whitehouse: Global transition to renewables would help national security Hillicon Valley: Senate unanimously confirms Chris Inglis as first White House cyber czar | Scrutiny mounts on Microsoft’s surveillance technology | Senators unveil bill to crack down on cyber criminals MORE (R-S.C.) and Sheldon Whithouse (D-R.I.) team up to warn about foreign fossil fuels
“Corruption, autocracy, and terrorism are a persistent threat to nations that stand on the rule of law, and America has long been the exemplar of the rule-of-law nation,” they wrote in a piece published in TIME. “A world in which oil and gas money has less power is a world that will likely have less corruption, autocracy, and terror. That world will be a safer world for America.”
Read more about what they had to say here.
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WHAT WE’RE READING:
Pebble: Appeals Court revives case challenging EPA’s removal of watershed protection, Alaska Public Media reports
Three Hurricanes. A Deep Freeze. A Biblical Flood: Lake Charles Is America’s Climate Future, BuzzFeed News reports
NASA says Earth is now trapping an ‘unprecedented’ amount of heat, The Washington Post reports
States’ feud delivers Supreme Court’s first groundwater test, E&E News reports
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Pelosi says she would not be open to gas tax expansion, Reuters reports
ICYMI: Stories from Thursday (and Wednesday night)…
Graham, Whitehouse: Global transition to renewables would help national security
NOAA gets first Senate-confirmed administrator since 2017
EPA announces new clean air advisors after firing Trump appointees
Watchdog: Bureau of Land Management saw messaging failures, understaffing during pandemic
Gucci unveils animal-free leather alternative
Environmental groups urge congressional leaders to leave climate provisions in infrastructure package
Senate confirms Biden pick for No. 2 role at Interior
Family of woman decapitated by gate in Utah sues Park Service, claiming negligence
337K affected by power outage in Puerto Rico
‘Dangerous’ and ‘record-breaking’ heat wave affects 50 million Americans
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