By Timothy Cama The Energy Information Administration (EIA) is due to roll out its important annual report on the state of energy in the United States and where it is headed. The federal agency's Annual Energy Outlook gives a decades-long look into the future, with projections for energy supply, prices and other factors in different scenarios. The rollout Tuesday at an event at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies is one of the first major public events for Linda Capuano, the EIA administrator, who was sworn into her job in early January. Meanwhile, lawmakers on Capitol Hill will be busy moving forward on issues including public lands, energy infrastructure and reorganizing the Department of Energy (DOE). The House Natural Resources Committee's federal lands subpanel will hold a Tuesday hearing on three bills, including one to create a national monument to honor Medgar Evers. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke asked Trump to use his executive authority to create such a monument last year. The Education and Workforce Committee in the House is planning a hearing, also on Tuesday, examining the Mine Safety and Health Administration. The House Energy and Commerce Committee is slated to continue its Energy Department "modernization" efforts with a Tuesday hearing focusing on nuclear infrastructure. The same day, the House Science Committee will discuss the International Agency for Research on Cancer, a United Nations agency. The GOP has long accused the agency of using unsound science in its reviews of pesticides, particularly its 2016 finding that glyphosate is likely a carcinogen. That conclusion conflicted with other experts' findings. On the other side of Capitol Hill, the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee will hold a hearing Wednesday on the impact of federal environmental regulations on farming and ranching communities. The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee on Thursday is planning to discuss energy infrastructure at a hearing. And on Wednesday, that committee's subpanel on public lands, forests and mining is gathering for a hearing on 15 bills in its jurisdiction. Recent stories: Interior apologizes after incorrectly saying Obama blocked coal mines Interior head to travel to Carolinas to discuss off shore drilling Interior rolls back oil drilling policies for federal land Trump 'really didn't care about' ANWR initially New York to sue EPA over Obama water rule delay Uncertainty swirls around Pebble Mine after EPA surprise American Meteorological Society asks Trump to check government agencies for climate change information EPA delays Obama water rule Trump: 'We have ended the war on American energy' Dems go on the attack during EPA chief's hearing Washington gov rejects proposed oil-by-rail train station |
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