S-1863-118
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 311.
Sponsored by Christopher Coons (D-DE)
What it does
The PROVE IT Act would require the Department of Energy (DOE) to conduct a study comparing the greenhouse gas emissions intensity of goods produced in the United States to the same goods produced in other countries. DOE would also be required to build and maintain a publicly accessible online database publishing those comparisons and the underlying emissions data for individual products.
Who benefits
U.S. manufacturers in energy-intensive industries (steel, aluminum, cement, chemicals) whose products may show lower emissions intensity than foreign competitors, potentially gaining a competitive argument for trade policy. Policymakers and researchers who would gain access to standardized, government-verified emissions data. Advocates for carbon border adjustment mechanisms who need an empirical foundation for such policies. Consumers and businesses seeking to make purchasing decisions based on emissions data. Trading partners with cleaner production methods who could demonstrate that fact publicly.
Who is hurt
Foreign producers — particularly in countries with higher emissions intensity — whose competitive disadvantage would be documented in a public, government-endorsed database, potentially supporting future trade restrictions against them. U.S. industries whose emissions intensity compares unfavorably to foreign competitors could face reputational or regulatory risk once data is public. DOE would bear new administrative and budgetary costs to conduct the study and maintain the database. Taxpayers would fund the study and ongoing database operations.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the United States currently lacks a consistent, government-verified dataset comparing the carbon footprint of domestically produced goods to those made abroad. Without this data, policymakers cannot accurately assess whether existing or proposed carbon border measures are justified, proportionate, or legally defensible under international trade rules. The study would fill a critical information gap using objective, transparent methodology, giving Congress and the public a factual foundation for future decisions. Supporters also contend that U.S. manufacturers — who often operate under stricter environmental standards than foreign competitors — are disadvantaged when their cleaner production processes go unrecognized. A public database would allow those manufacturers to demonstrate their emissions performance, potentially strengthening the case for trade policies that level the playing field. The bill imposes no new regulations, mandates no emissions reductions, and does not prejudge any policy outcome; it simply gathers and publishes facts.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill, while framed as a neutral data-gathering exercise, is designed to lay the groundwork for a carbon border adjustment mechanism — a trade measure that could trigger retaliatory tariffs from major trading partners and disrupt global supply chains. The database could be selectively used to justify protectionist trade policies under an environmental rationale, harming U.S. importers, retailers, and consumers who rely on lower-cost foreign goods. Critics also question whether DOE has the technical capacity and access to reliable foreign production data needed to produce accurate, apples-to-apples comparisons; methodological inconsistencies could produce misleading results that nonetheless carry the weight of government authority. Others argue the study duplicates work already underway at EPA, DOE, and international bodies such as the IEA, making it an inefficient use of federal resources. Finally, some contend that any resulting database could expose U.S. industries to new litigation or regulatory pressure if their own emissions data is unfavorable.