HR-9213-119
Referred to the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure.
Sponsored by Donald Beyer (D-VA)
What it does
This bill would require the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) to conduct a feasibility study on electrifying passenger and freight rail corridors across the United States. The study would map all existing and planned rail corridors, identify how each is currently powered, assess where electrification or other clean rail technologies may be viable, and consult with railroads, state and local governments, tribal governments, and territories. The FRA would submit a progress report to Congress within one year of enactment and a final report one year after that.
Who benefits
Policymakers and Congress, who would receive a comprehensive data baseline for future rail electrification decisions. Electric rail equipment manufacturers and clean energy companies, who could benefit from any future electrification programs informed by the study. Communities near freight and passenger rail lines, who may benefit from reduced diesel emissions if electrification follows. State and local transportation planners, who would gain a federally compiled resource. Tribal governments and U.S. territories, which are explicitly included in the consultation process.
Who is hurt
Diesel locomotive manufacturers and fuel suppliers, whose markets could face long-term pressure if the study leads to future electrification mandates or incentives. Class I, II, and III freight railroads, which are privately owned and may face compliance costs from consultation requirements or future policy built on the study's findings. FRA staff, who would bear the administrative burden of conducting and reporting the study. Taxpayers, who would fund the study, though the bill directs the FRA to minimize expenditures by reusing existing resources.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the United States lacks a comprehensive national inventory of rail electrification feasibility, making evidence-based infrastructure planning impossible. They contend that rail electrification — already widespread in Europe and Asia — can reduce transportation sector emissions, which account for the largest share of U.S. greenhouse gas output, and that a low-cost mapping study is a prudent first step before any major spending commitment. They also argue the bill's explicit directive to reuse existing FRA resources minimizes taxpayer cost while generating actionable data for Congress.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the study is a precursor to future federal mandates or spending programs that could impose significant costs on privately owned freight railroads, which have already invested billions in their own infrastructure without federal direction. They contend that the U.S. rail network's geography, freight density, and private ownership structure differ fundamentally from electrified systems abroad, making the study's utility limited and its conclusions potentially misleading as a basis for policy. They also argue that Congress could be directing FRA resources toward more immediate rail safety or infrastructure priorities.