HR-3617-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
Sponsored by John James (R-MI)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Energy (DOE) to conduct ongoing assessments of critical energy resources — defined as energy resources essential to the U.S. energy sector whose supply chains are vulnerable to disruption. DOE would be required to evaluate domestic supply chain vulnerabilities, production capacity constraints, federal regulations affecting production or importation, reliance on imports, and efforts by adversarial nations to exploit these markets. DOE would also be required to develop strategies to strengthen supply chains, create substitutes for critical energy resources, and improve recycling and reuse technologies.
Who benefits
U.S. energy companies and manufacturers that depend on stable supplies of critical minerals and energy resources. Domestic mining and processing industries that could see increased federal support or reduced regulatory barriers. Technology and clean energy sectors (e.g., electric vehicle, battery, and solar manufacturers) that rely on critical minerals. National security and defense contractors dependent on uninterrupted energy resource supply chains. Workers in domestic extraction and processing industries. Recycling and materials technology firms that could benefit from DOE-funded development efforts.
Who is hurt
Foreign suppliers — particularly those in adversarial nations — whose market position could be weakened by U.S. supply chain diversification efforts. Environmental and conservation groups concerned that accelerating domestic production of critical minerals could increase land disturbance, water use, and habitat disruption. Communities near potential new mining or processing sites that may face environmental or public health impacts. Importers and trading companies whose business models depend on existing international supply arrangements. Federal agencies and DOE staff who would bear new administrative and reporting burdens.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the United States is dangerously dependent on foreign sources — particularly China — for critical minerals essential to both the energy sector and national defense, and that this dependence creates strategic vulnerabilities. They contend that requiring DOE to systematically assess and address these vulnerabilities is a prudent, low-cost step toward energy security, pointing to documented cases where China has restricted exports of rare earth elements and other critical materials to exert geopolitical leverage. They further argue that developing domestic substitutes and recycling technologies would reduce long-term import dependence without mandating specific production outcomes.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's broad, open-ended mandate — requiring DOE to assess "federal regulations affecting domestic production" — could be used to justify rolling back environmental protections under the guise of supply chain security, without clear statutory guardrails. They contend that the bill lacks specific metrics, timelines, or enforceable outcomes, making it more of a directive to study problems than a meaningful solution, and that similar assessments have been ordered by executive action without producing significant supply chain improvements. They further argue that accelerating domestic extraction without robust environmental standards could shift costs onto local communities and ecosystems.
Constitutional context
The bill delegates new assessment and strategy functions to DOE under Congress's Commerce Clause authority (Art. I, §8, cl. 3) and the Necessary and Proper Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 18). Because the bill directs DOE to evaluate existing federal regulations affecting production, any resulting regulatory changes would face heightened judicial scrutiny under Loper Bright v. Raimondo (2024), which requires courts to independently assess whether agency actions are clearly authorized by statute rather than deferring to agency interpretation.
Checks and balances
The executive branch (DOE) gains new assessment and strategy-development authority; Congress retains oversight through appropriations and reporting requirements, and courts would independently review any downstream regulatory actions under the post-Loper Bright standard.
Historical precedent
The Energy Policy Act of 2020 and executive orders (e.g., E.O. 13953, 2020; E.O. 14017, 2021) previously directed federal agencies to assess critical mineral supply chains, establishing a direct legislative and administrative precedent for this type of mandate.