By Steve Haner,
Several legislative attempts to either repeal outright or reduce the cost impact of the Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA) will have their fifteen seconds in the sun later today. Their chances of surviving until sundown are slim.

The various bills, all with Republican sponsors, are set to be discussed in the Virginia Senate Commerce and Labor Committee. So far, that panel has been taking up various bills to expand or add complexity to the 2020 legislationโs various mandates.
Now come the efforts to kill it. In 2022, following Governor Glenn Youngkinโs election, the House of Delegates with its refreshed GOP majority passed a VCEA repeal bill. It could not clear the Senate, still controlled by the Democrats, and frankly that first repeal effort got no support from Youngkin or his team.
This year, the strong push to get Virginia out of this self-imposed energy straight jacket is coming from the Senate, and House Republicans didnโt mount a serious charge.
Adding a touch of drama, today is also the day the Trump Administration is going to repeal the 2009 Environmental Protection Agency ruling that carbon dioxide is a pollutant subject to air pollution regulations. That โendangerment findingโ is the justification for the state-level VCEA just as much as it is for all the federal efforts to ban coal and natural gas electricity.
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