by Steve Haner
A legislative commission created in 2008 to oversee one narrow function of two electric utilities is about to expand its scope of oversight of all forms of energy in Virginia, including nuclear, coal, and natural gas. It will be the legislative counterpart โ and counterweight โ to the politically independent State Corporation Commission.ย
The bill toย accomplishย that (House Bill 633) qualifies asย one of theย mostย sweeping and dangerous pieces of legislation pending at the 2026 General Assembly, and that is saying something when one reads the other bills that have been filed. Adding a touch of irony, the patron of the bill granting such sweeping power to legislative Democrats is the Republican House Minority Leader, and he hails from the heart of coal country. ย
The bill abolishes the long-standingย Virginia Coal and Energy Commission he serves on, which admittedly had been inactive in recent years, andย transfers its role to this group. The name changes from the Commission on Electric Utility Regulation (CEUR) to theย Energy Commission of Virginiaย (ECV). The first provision ofย the ECVโsย powersย in the new bill directs it to:ย ย
Examine the production, transmission,โฏdistribution,โฏstorage,โฏandโฏuseโฏofโฏenergy in the Commonwealth,โฏincluding energy efficiency and conservation,โฏas part ofย monitoringย the development and implementation ofโฏthe Energy Policy of the Commonwealth (ยงโฏ45.2-1705โฏet seq.)โฏandโฏthe Virginia Energy Plan (ยงโฏ45.2-1710โฏet seq.).ย ย
Theย energy policy it references in the Code of Virginia could not be more committed to the mission of abolishing hydrocarbon energy in every sector of the economy, not just the electricity industry. Its overriding policy principles include: โClimate change is an urgent and pressing challenge for the Commonwealth. Swift decarbonization and a transition toย clean energy areย requiredย to meet the urgency of the challengeโฆโย









