U.S. Senate votes to confirm Biden EPA pick Michael Regan
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[March 11, 2021]
By Valerie Volcovici
(Reuters) - The U.S. Senate on Wednesday
voted to confirm Michael Regan as the next administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency, which will play a central role in the
Biden administration's plans to slash greenhouse gas emissions from
power plants, vehicles and oil and gas facilities.
The bipartisan tally in the Democratic-led Senate was 66-34 to confirm
Regan, who will be the first Black man to lead the EPA.
Regan will take the helm of the agency as it rebuilds after the Trump
era, which had been focused on undoing Obama era regulations on
industry, slashing the agency's budget and staff and upending
independent scientific panels.
He will need to quickly ramp up the work of EPA staff as the new
administration races to carry out President Joe Biden's executive
orders, which set goals to zero out emissions from power plants by 2035,
revamp vehicle efficiency standards, accelerate the deployment of
electric cars and crack down on methane emissions from oil and gas
operations.
Regan, 44, was the head of North Carolina’s environmental regulator,
where he earned a reputation as a consensus builder.
At his confirmation hearing, he was introduced by North Carolina's two
Republican senators and stressed that he will work with every state to
ensure that their concerns about the transition to cleaner energy are
heard.
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Michael Regan testifies before a Senate Environment and Public Works
Committee hearing on his nomination to be administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), on Capitol Hill in
Washington, U.S., February 3, 2021. REUTERS/Brandon Bell/Pool
Republicans have said they are worried a rapid shift away from
fossil fuels would kill jobs and stunt economic growth in the
world’s top producer of oil and gas and have already criticized some
of Biden’s early moves like canceling the permit for the Keystone XL
oil pipeline from Canada, and pausing new leases for oil drilling on
federal land.
West Virginia Senator Shelley Moore Capito, ranking Republican on
the Senate energy panel, said she is concerned that Biden's National
Climate Adviser Gina McCarthy will have more control over policy
than the EPA.
"I hope Secretary Regan can cut Gina McCarthy out of power and let
her know who is calling the shots for environmental policy in the
Biden administration," she said on the Senate floor.
Environmental groups praised the confirmation.
"And as he did in North Carolina, I know (Regan) will work quickly
to restore morale and achieve real results," Environmental Defense
Fund President Fred Krupp said in a statement.
(Additional reporting by Nichola Groom and Richard Cowan; Editing by
Aurora Ellis; Editing by Chris Reese)
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