In a document submitted to the United Nations under the Paris Agreement, the administration stated that it had “conducted a detailed analysis to underpin this 2030 target, reviewing a range of pathways for each sector of the economy that produces CO2 and non-CO2 greenhouse gases: electricity, transportation, buildings, industry, and the land sector.” No such analysis has been provided to Congress, despite repeated requests for it.
Category: Environment
The bipartisan House Committee on Natural Resources unanimously voted to pass Rep. Lauren Boebert’s amendment to the Concurrent Resolution on the Budget for Fiscal Year 2022 to keep the Bureau of Land Management headquarters in Grand Junction.
Republican amendments that committee Democrats voted against included ensuring the U.S. will not import any minerals from mines that employ child or forced labor.
Experts at Texas A&M University’s Agricultural and Food Policy Center detail the devastating impact President Biden’s tax code changes could have on family farms.
"Democrats are ramming through a bill that will effectively end new oil and gas leasing on federal lands and waters...It is difficult to imagine a more pro-China, pro-Russia, and pro-OPEC piece of legislation."
GO HERE TO TELL CONGRESS: IMPEACH BIDEN! Since the first day of his presidency, Joe Biden has shown that the main objective of his administration is to destroy American jobs. In one of his first moves in the Oval Office, Biden eliminated at least 11,000 good-paying jobs by cancelling the Keystone XL Pipeline – a move lauded … Continue reading These numbers reveal how Dems declare war against American jobs
Synthetic plastics reduce mankind’s impact on wildlife populations in two main areas.
"America is facing crises both at home and abroad, yet Congress is nowhere to be found. It is past time for us to come back to D.C. and tackle the critical needs of our country."
Biden signed an executive order that would roll back the Trump administration’s actions of rescinding Obama’s WOTUS rule and finalizing the NWPR.
A mere single month of public meetings is a woefully insufficient amount of time to collect meaningful input on a regulation that will have a profound, long-term impact on the everyday lives of American farmers, businesses, families, and our environment.