All Roll Calls
Yes: 224 • No: 203
Sponsored By: Representative Fedorchak
Passed House
Creates a unified, certificate-based federal system for authorizing cross-border oil, natural gas, and electric transmission facilities. It would replace some Presidential-permit requirements and set firm approval timelines to speed cross-border energy projects.
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3 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 0 costs, 1 mixed.
If enacted, the bill would repeal the current federal order required to send electricity to Canada or Mexico. Related changes would shift certain hearings and findings to the Energy Secretary. The Secretary would need to find that proposed transmission would not harm U.S. power supply or public-interest coordination. These changes would start 1 year after enactment.
This bill would create one certificate of crossing to build, connect, or run oil, gas, or electric lines at the border. FERC would decide oil and gas pipelines; the Energy Secretary would decide electric lines and require compliance with grid reliability standards. For projects under NEPA, the agency would decide within 120 days after the final NEPA action, unless the project is not in the public interest. No Presidential permit would be needed going forward, and the President could not revoke listed existing permits unless Congress authorizes it. Facilities already operating, already permitted, or with an application pending at enactment would be exempt (pending cases until denial or two years after enactment). Many changes would not need a new certificate, like reversing flow, changing owners or volume, or adding or removing interconnections; a border-crossing facility would mean the part within 1,000 feet of the border. Other federal approvals still apply (Natural Gas Act sections 3 and 7 and FERC oil-pipeline authority). Agencies would propose rules within 180 days and issue final rules within 1 year, and most changes would start 1 year after enactment.
If enacted, FERC would have 30 days to grant a complete application to import gas from or export gas to Canada or Mexico. The 30-day clock would start when FERC receives a complete filing. This change would take effect 1 year after enactment.
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Fedorchak
ND • R
Rep. Dunn, Neal P. [R-FL-2]
FL • R
Sponsored 6/23/2025
Joyce (PA)
PA • R
Sponsored 7/2/2025
All Roll Calls
Yes: 224 • No: 203
house vote • 9/18/2025
On Passage
Yes: 224 • No: 203
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HR21 — Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act
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