[Senate Hearing 119-123]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]


                                                        S. Hrg. 119-123

                       EISNER, WALSH, ROBERTSON,
                         AND ERDOS NOMINATIONS
=======================================================================

                                HEARING

                               BEFORE THE

                              COMMITTEE ON
                      ENERGY AND NATURAL RESOURCES
                          UNITED STATES SENATE

                    ONE HUNDRED NINETEENTH CONGRESS

                             FIRST SESSION

                                   TO

 CONSIDER THE NOMINATIONS OF DAVID EISNER TO BE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF 
ENERGY FOR INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, DEPARMENT OF ENERGY; TIMOTHY WALSH TO 
    BE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF ENERGY FOR ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 
  DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY; AUDREY ROBERTSON TO BE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF 
   ENERGY FOR ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND RENEWABLE ENERGY, DEPARTMENT OF 
ENERGY; AND LANNY ERDOS TO BE DIRECTOR OF THE OFFICE OF SURFACE MINING 
        RECLAMATION AND ENFORCEMENT, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

                               __________

                              JULY 9, 2025

                               __________


                       Printed for the use of the
               Committee on Energy and Natural Resources

        Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.govinfo.gov
        
                                __________

                   U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE                    
61-243                      WASHINGTON : 2026 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------     
        
        
               COMMITTEE ON ENERGY AND NATURAL RESOURCES

                        MIKE LEE, Utah, Chairman
JOHN BARRASSO, Wyoming               MARTIN HEINRICH, New Mexico
JAMES E. RISCH, Idaho                RON WYDEN, Oregon
STEVE DAINES, Montana                MARIA CANTWELL, Washington
TOM COTTON, Arkansas                 MAZIE K. HIRONO, Hawaii
DAVID McCORMICK, Pennsylvania        ANGUS S. KING, Jr., Maine
JAMES C. JUSTICE, West Virginia      CATHERINE CORTEZ MASTO, Nevada
BILL CASSIDY, Louisiana              JOHN W. HICKENLOOPER, Colorado
CINDY HYDE-SMITH, Mississippi        ALEX PADILLA, California
LISA MURKOWSKI, Alaska               RUBEN GALLEGO, Arizona
JOHN HOEVEN, North Dakota

                  Wendy Baig, Majority Staff Director
            Patrick J. McCormick III, Majority Chief Counsel
                 Jasmine Hunt, Minority Staff Director
                 Sam E. Fowler, Minority Chief Counsel
                            
                            C O N T E N T S

                              ----------                              

                           OPENING STATEMENTS

                                                                   Page
Lee, Hon. Mike, Chairman and a U.S. Senator from Utah............     1
Heinrich, Hon. Martin, Ranking Member and a U.S. Senator from 
  New Mexico.....................................................     4
McCormick, Hon. David, a U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania..........     5

                               WITNESSES

Eisner, David, nominated to be Assistant Secretary of Energy for 
  International Affairs, Department of Energy....................     7
Walsh, Timothy, nominated to be Assistant Secretary of Energy for 
  Environmental Management, Department of Energy.................    11
Robertson, Audrey, nominated to be Assistant Secretary of Energy 
  for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Department of 
  Energy.........................................................    15
Erdos, Lanny, nominated to be the Director of the Office of 
  Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Department of the 
  Interior.......................................................    19

          ALPHABETICAL LISTING AND APPENDIX MATERIAL SUBMITTED

American Coal Council:
    Letter for the Record........................................    84
Eisner, David:
    Opening Statement............................................     7
    Written Testimony............................................     9
    Responses to Questions for the Record........................    46
Energy Communities Alliance:
    Letter for the Record........................................    70
Erdos, Lanny:
    Opening Statement............................................    19
    Written Testimony............................................    21
    Responses to Questions for the Record........................    69
Hanford Communities:
    Letter for the Record........................................    73
Heinrich, Hon. Martin:
    Opening Statement............................................     4
Lee, Hon. Mike:
    Opening Statement............................................     1
McCormick, Hon. David:
    Opening Statement............................................     5
Ohio Coal Association:
    Letter for the Record........................................    85
Richland, WA (City of):
    Letter for the Record........................................    75
Robertson, Audrey:
    Opening Statement............................................    15
    Written Testimony............................................    17
    Responses to Questions for the Record........................    56
Scioto Valley-Piketon Area Council of Governments:
    Letter for the Record........................................    78
SRS Community Reuse Organization:
    Letter for the Record........................................    81
Walsh, Timothy:
    Opening Statement............................................    11
    Written Testimony............................................    13
    Responses to Questions for the Record........................    51
Wyoming Energy Authority:
    Letter for the Record........................................    86
Wyoming Mining Association:
    Letter for the Record........................................    87

 
                       EISNER, WALSH, ROBERTSON,
                         AND ERDOS NOMINATIONS

                              ----------                              


                        WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2025

                                       U.S. Senate,
                 Committee on Energy and Natural Resources,
                                                    Washington, DC.
    The Committee met, pursuant to notice, at 9:30 a.m. in Room 
SD-366, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Hon. Mike Lee, Chairman 
of the Committee, presiding.

              OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. MIKE LEE, 
                     U.S. SENATOR FROM UTAH

    The Chairman. The Committee will come to order. Good 
morning and welcome to all of you.
    Before beginning my opening statement, I want to let my 
colleagues know how we will proceed today with this hearing. I 
also want to thank Senator Heinrich and his staff for working 
with us on the schedule for today's activities and to thank all 
Senators in advance for their participation. Today, we will be 
holding our eighth hearing on nominations to serve in this 
administration in posts under this Committee's jurisdiction, 
and we will hear testimony from four nominees for important 
positions in the government.
    I thank President Trump for sending us these nominees. They 
are: at the Department of Energy, David Eisner, to be the 
Assistant Secretary of Energy for International Affairs; 
Timothy Walsh, to be the Assistant Secretary of Energy for 
Environmental Management; Audrey Robertson, to be the Assistant 
Secretary of Energy for Energy Efficiency and Renewable 
Energy--I think the name of the game at the Department of 
Energy is use the word energy as many times in these titles 
they possibly can--and then, at the Department of the Interior, 
we have Lanny Erdos, to be the Director of the Office of 
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement.
    We will now meet these highly qualified nominees and allow 
them each to give an opening statement and to introduce their 
family and friends. I will go over a brief introduction of each 
of them first.
    Our first witness today will be David Eisner, to be 
Assistant Secretary of Energy for International Affairs. At the 
Department of Energy, the Office of International Affairs, or 
IA, is the primary coordinator for international implementation 
of the Department's programs, including bilateral meetings with 
foreign energy leaders and programs. IA works to advance 
America's economic and energy goals and also to counter malign 
influences that could threaten our nation's energy supply. The 
Office leads dozens of bilateral and regional fora, advocates 
for American energy priorities, and is the lead office for 
DOE's responsibilities as a member of the Committee on Foreign 
Investment in the United States, or CFIUS.
    Mr. Eisner is an excellent choice to handle these duties. 
He currently serves as Counselor to the Secretary of the 
Treasury, and in the first Trump administration was the 
Assistant Secretary for Management at the U.S. Department of 
the Treasury, as well as serving as the Acting Treasurer of the 
United States. During his prior service at Treasury, Assistant 
Secretary Eisner helped develop the Department's $13 billion 
budget, as well as engage in strategic planning, risk 
management, and led the implementation of various Treasury 
programs. He also provided the internal oversight of all 
Treasury bureaus, including the IRS.
    In the private sector, Mr. Eisner has worked as an 
operating partner at Edison Parker in New York, Chairman of 
K1x, Inc., and as Chairman of the Board at Finality LTD. He 
holds a bachelor of science in accounting and government from 
American University and earned his juris doctorate from Boston 
University School of Law.
    Next, we will hear from Timothy Walsh, to be Assistant 
Secretary of Energy for Environmental Management. Our 
colleague, Senator David McCormick, will introduce Mr. Walsh 
because they served in uniform together, but before he does so, 
I will remark briefly on this position and on Mr. Walsh's 
impressive career.
    The Office of Environmental Management supports the 
Department of Energy to meet the challenges of the nation's 
Manhattan Project and Cold War legacy responsibilities. 
Established in 1989, it is responsible for the cleanup of 
radioactive waste, spent nuclear fuel and materials, and 
disposing of transuranic and low-level waste and contaminated 
soil and water, and decommissioning excess facilities. This 
office oversees an annual budget of more than $8 billion, over 
90 percent of which is contracted to industry. Mr. Walsh is the 
CEO of Confluence Companies. He graduated from the United 
States Military Academy. At Ranger School, he served as an Army 
officer with the 237th Engineer Battalion in Heilbronn, Germany 
and commanded a company in an engineer battalion of the 82nd 
Airborne Division, deploying in support of Operations Desert 
Shield and Desert Storm, where he earned the Bronze Star for 
heroism.
    After his military service, Mr. Walsh earned an M.S. in 
civil engineering and construction and management from Stanford 
University. He then joined Rudolph and Sletten as a project 
manager in California and served as VP at Mortenson, overseeing 
projects exceeding $3.5 billion.
    Third, we will hear testimony from Audrey Robertson, to be 
Assistant Secretary of Energy for Energy Efficiency and 
Renewable Energy. The Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable 
Energy (EERE) encompasses 11 technology offices in the 
Department, focusing on issues including solar, wind, hydrogen, 
and geothermal. EERE's research agenda is centered on emerging 
geothermal and hydropower technologies, biofuels, and critical 
minerals. Securing domestic supply chains for critical minerals 
and components of energy technologies, strengthening America's 
industrial sector, and ensuring the reliability, security, and 
modernization of the electricity grid are all priorities of 
this office under the Trump administration.
    Ms. Robertson has been an active business entrepreneur in 
the oil and gas field since 2018, including serving as CFO and 
Executive VP of Franklin Mountain Energy, LLC, co-founder of an 
energy-focused private equity firm in Denver, and is managing 
partner of Copper Trail Partners, LLC. Since 2021, Ms. 
Robertson has served on the Board of Directors of Liberty 
Energy, Inc., and has been Vice Chair of the New Mexico Oil and 
Gas Association since 2022. She also worked as an investment 
banking analyst at Goldman Sachs and as a director and partner-
member at Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors. Ms. Robertson holds 
a bachelor of science, magna cum laude, from Cornell University 
and a master's degree in accounting from the University of 
Southern California. In addition to her academic achievements, 
Ms. Robertson was a member of Cornell's women's varsity polo 
team and was named one of the Denver Business Journal's 
Outstanding Women in Business in 2014. She is an award-winning 
children's author and the proud mother of two sons.
    Fourth and finally, we will hear from the honorable Lanny 
Erdos, to be the Director of the Office of Surface Mining 
Reclamation and Enforcement. The Office of Surface Mining 
Reclamation and Enforcement regulates active coal mining as 
required by the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act, or 
SMCRA, that ensures mines are restored to beneficial use after 
mining activity concludes and mitigates the effects of past 
mining through abandoned coal mine reclamation. The Office 
authorizes states and tribes to administer their own coal 
permitting and regulation activities under SMCRA, subject to 
oversight. The Office also helps these states and tribes by 
providing operational funding, training, technical assistance, 
and support. The President's OSM budget request of $262 million 
for Fiscal Year 2026 supports the President's goals to 
revitalize the domestic coal industry as part of the economy's 
energy sector.
    Mr. Erdos is returning to the position of Director after 
having served as Principal Deputy Director at the Office of 
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement beginning in 2019. 
Following his service, Mr. Erdos worked in reclamation and 
environmental compliance management at Eagle Forge Services, 
LLC, and is currently President of Cardinal Reclamation 
Company, LLC, Vice President at Eagle Summit Resources, and 
Vice President of Iron Eagle Land Rehabilitation. Mr. Erdos has 
considerable public policy and industry experience, having 
served in various capacities at the State of Ohio's Department 
of Natural Resources for 31 years, including nine years as 
Chief. His range of responsibilities included the management 
and regulation of Ohio's coal and aggregate resources, as well 
as management of Ohio's abandoned mine land and mine safety 
programs. Mr. Erdos worked extensively with agencies and 
departments, including the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency 
and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, as well as the 
Office of Surface Mining. Mr. Erdos began his career as the 
foreman at Horizon Coal Company in Strasburg, Ohio and operator 
at Y&O Coal Company in Hopedale, Ohio. Mr. Erdos is a native of 
West Virginia and received bipartisan support from the Senate 
for this position, to which he was confirmed by a voice vote in 
2020.
    Energy underpins everything we do--our jobs, our security, 
and our livelihoods. Today, we are going to evaluate nominees 
tasked with strengthening every link in America's energy chain. 
They are being considered for positions that affect whether we 
can mine our own resources, whether we can reclaim what has 
been left behind, develop next-generation energy, and do all of 
this while defending our interests abroad. Each of these 
offices controls vast sums of taxpayer resources, each touches 
a critical role in America's energy strategy, and each has, 
under the Biden administration, drifted from its core mission.
    The Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement 
exists to enforce the law, not slow-walk permits or bog down 
states in endless red tape. The Office of Environmental 
Management was created to clean up Cold War era nuclear waste, 
not to fund open-ended contracts with no accountability. The 
Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy has lost its 
way, chasing pet projects and overreaching appliance mandates 
instead of focusing on early-stage R&D for dispatchable clean 
sources like geothermal and hydro. And the Office of 
International Affairs, it has to understand the stakes. Energy 
can be used as a weapon in the hands of our adversaries. We 
need people who know how to use American resources to 
strengthen our position, not apologize for it. We need nominees 
who are ready to streamline permitting, cut waste, rein in 
overreach, and advance an energy strategy that actually works 
for the American people.
    So, today, we look forward to hearing from our nominees. 
Will abandoned mines be restored, or tied up in bureaucracy 
while states wait for Washington to act? Will nuclear waste be 
secured and repurposed, or left to sit while federal 
contractors bill overtime? Will EERE be a research hub, or a 
political slush fund? And will our international engagement 
make us stronger, or leave us more dependent? That's the bar. 
That's the mission. And we expect results.
    I will now turn to Ranking Member Heinrich for his opening 
statement.

          OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. MARTIN HEINRICH, 
                  U.S. SENATOR FROM NEW MEXICO

    Senator Heinrich. Thank you, Chairman Lee, and welcome, Mr. 
Erdos, Ms. Robertson, Mr. Walsh, Mr. Eisner.
    The Committee meets this morning to consider nominations to 
four very different offices. They range from expertise in coal 
mining to energy efficiency and renewable energy, from cleaning 
up nuclear weapon sites, to international affairs. Two things 
that the four jobs have in common, however, are their 
importance and the responsibility the officeholders will have 
to do well by the American people. Our task this morning, as in 
every confirmation hearing, is to determine how the nominees we 
are asked to entrust with these important offices plan to use 
them to do well by the American people.
    Mr. Erdos has the advantage of having been nominated and 
confirmed to the position five years ago. And while much may 
have changed in the past five years, the need for the Office of 
Surface Mining to protect communities and the environment 
during mining, to restore the land after mining, and to reclaim 
abandoned mine lands, remains as great as ever. Indeed, the 
need may be even greater, as this administration seeks to 
increase coal production. We need your assurance, Mr. Erdos, 
that you remain committed to enforcing our surface mining laws 
and regulations and to restoring and reclaiming abandoned mine 
lands. Similarly, we seek assurances from you, Mr. Walsh, that 
you will work diligently to clean up the environmental legacy 
of the Manhattan Project and Cold War weapon sites. Secretary 
Wright testified last month that the Department remains 
committed to the cleanup program, and we want to hear that 
commitment from you as well.
    I harbor greater concerns for your offices, Ms. Robertson 
and Mr. Eisner. One of President Trump's first acts after being 
sworn in for his second term was to abandon our efforts to 
transition to a clean energy economy. The Department has 
announced plans to cut dozens of energy efficiency rules that 
save consumers hundreds of dollars on their utility bills 
annually. It has proposed a 74 percent reduction in next year's 
budget for energy efficiency and renewable energy programs. 
These cuts, combined with the rollback of the clean energy tax 
credits in the reconciliation bill that Republicans supported, 
will undoubtedly drive up energy prices. The reconciliation 
bill alone is estimated to increase annual energy costs more 
than $16 billion in 2030 and more than $33 billion by 2035, and 
American families will bear those increased costs.
    I need to ask you, Ms. Robertson, whether you intend to 
continue the Department's longstanding efforts to improve 
energy efficiency and develop renewable energy sources, or 
whether you plan to abandon those programs. I am similarly 
concerned by the 40 percent reduction in the Department's 
budget request for International Affairs, and this 
administration's apparent disdain for our allies and global 
alliances. The work of DOE's International Affairs Office is 
critical to maintaining U.S. competitiveness and securing 
economic alliances with our allies, and I will seek your 
assurance, Mr. Eisner, that the Department will remain 
committed to working with our allies on international energy 
issues.
    I look forward to hearing from our nominees on these and 
other issues this morning, and I appreciate their willingness 
to take on these important and challenging responsibilities.
    Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    The Chairman. Senator McCormick.

          OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. DAVID MCCORMICK, 
                 U.S. SENATOR FROM PENNSYLVANIA

    Senator McCormick. Great. Thank you, Chairman Lee and 
Ranking Member Heinrich. Colleagues, thanks for giving me the 
opportunity to introduce my friend and fellow West Point 
graduate, Tim Walsh, for his nomination to be Assistant 
Secretary of Energy for Environmental Management, and 
congratulations to all four nominees and thank you for your 
willingness to serve. This is a great opportunity to really 
focus on a critical part of America's future.
    Tim, welcome to the Committee. I am so thrilled to see you 
and Lisa and Alex and Natalie, and Lisa, who I have known for 
more than 30 years. And I first met Tim at Fort Bragg as a 
young lieutenant in the 82nd Airborne. In 1990, when the 82nd 
Airborne Division deployed to Saudi Arabia as part of Operation 
Desert Shield, Tim was the Commander of C Company, 307th 
Engineering Battalion. I was his executive officer. Tim's Army 
career followed in the footsteps of his father, a decorated 
soldier who fought in World War II, Korea, and Vietnam, and 
took his family around the world. That legacy prepared Tim well 
for what we would soon face in the Middle East. In February 
1991, our unit rolled across the Iraqi desert in the opening 
hours of Desert Storm, helping to clear mines and destroy enemy 
munitions. And under the pressure of combat, Tim led our 
company with professionalism and courage, dedication to the 
mission, and was awarded the Bronze Star.
    Earlier in his career, Tim helped manage base projects in 
Turkey and other NATO countries and later earned a master's 
degree in civil engineering and construction management from 
Stanford. After retiring from the Army as a Captain, Tim 
applied what he learned in the military to begin a successful 
career in the private sector, eventually founding Confluence, a 
major real estate developer based in Golden, Colorado. If 
confirmed, Tim would lead the Office of Environmental 
Management, which works to clean up some of the world's most 
dangerous radioactive sites. Given Tim's experience as an Army 
engineer and managing large projects in the private sector, I 
am confident he will bring effective leadership to this 
important office.
    I hope my colleagues will join me today in supporting this 
combat veteran, this patriot, this successful businessman, and 
truly, one of the finest people I know. Congratulations, Tim, 
and I wish you all the best.
    Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    The Chairman. Thank you, Senator McCormick.
    The rules of the Committee require that all nominees be 
sworn in connection with the testimony they will provide, so if 
you would, each of you please rise and raise your right hand.
    Do you solemnly swear that the testimony you are about to 
provide to the Committee will be the truth, the whole truth, 
and nothing but the truth, so help you God?
    [Witnesses sworn.]
    The Chairman. Let the record reflect that all the witnesses 
answered in the affirmative.
    Now, before I have you begin your opening statements, I 
will also ask each of the witnesses three questions that are 
posed to all nominees appearing before the Committee.
    First, will you be available to appear before the Committee 
and other congressional committees to represent departmental 
positions and respond to issues of concern to Congress?
    [Witnesses respond, ``yes.'']
    The Chairman. Second, are you aware of any personal 
holdings, investments, or interests that could constitute a 
conflict of interest or create the appearance of such conflict, 
should you be confirmed and assume the office to which you have 
been nominated by the President?
    [Witnesses respond, ``no.'']
    The Chairman. And third, are you involved in, or do you 
have any assets in a blind trust?
    [Witnesses respond, ``no.'']
    The Chairman. Let the record reflect that all the witnesses 
answered in the affirmative to the first question and in the 
negative to the two next questions.
    All right, we will now hear from each of you. Mr. Eisner, 
we will start with you and then we will move to your left from 
there to Mr. Walsh, Ms. Robertson, and Mr. Erdos. Feel free to 
introduce any friends or family members, as you may choose, who 
may be here today.
    Thank you very much.

STATEMENT OF DAVID EISNER, NOMINATED TO BE ASSISTANT SECRETARY 
   OF ENERGY FOR INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

    Mr. Eisner. Thank you, Chairman Lee, Ranking Member 
Heinrich, and distinguished members of the Senate Energy and 
Natural Resources Committee.
    I am honored to appear before you as President Trump's 
nominee to be the next Assistant Secretary of International 
Affairs at the U.S. Department of Energy. I am grateful to 
President Trump for the honor and chance to serve my beloved 
country again. I am thankful to have the support of many loved 
ones today, both from near and far. Here today is my beautiful 
fiancee Rachael, my brother Ken, as well as friends and former 
colleagues from Treasury and my former business ventures. I am 
also grateful to be joined by three of my spiritual guides, 
Rabbi Mordechai Kamenetzky from Long Island, New York, Rabbi 
Shaul Robinson from New York City, and Rabbi Levi Shemtov from 
here in the District. Also, watching online is my 93-year-old 
mom, who is taking time out of her daily schedule of board 
games and activities at her home to proudly watch her beloved 
son appear before the U.S. Senate as a presidential nominee.
    I was born and raised just outside of Pittsburgh, in a 
middle-class suburb with my younger brother, Ken, by my father, 
who was a bookkeeper, and my mother, who was a schoolteacher. 
From an early age, I developed a deep appreciation for public 
service and a strong passion for giving back. That came 
directly from my parents, who were both active in the 
Pittsburgh Jewish community and always taught us the importance 
of serving others. As a teenager, I was active in my 
synagogue's youth service organization, and in 1975 and 1976, I 
had the honor to work for Senator Henry ``Scoop'' Jackson, a 
towering figure in the U.S. Senate for three decades. Senator 
Jackson inspired my passion for public service, and I went off 
to law school believing I would return to Washington, D.C., for 
a career in public policy.
    But, as life often does, mine took a different path. After 
law school, I was blessed with five separate careers, as a 
corporate attorney, investment banker, senior executive of a 
global investment bank, entrepreneur and startup CEO, and 
investor. In 2000, I co-founded TheMarkets.com, a financial 
data company backed by nine global financial institutions. One 
board member of that company was someone who's name you might 
recognize--Steven Mnuchin. Seventeen years later, then U.S. 
Treasury Secretary Mnuchin contacted me and asked if I had any 
interest in public service. I enthusiastically said yes. Among 
the many roles I played as the Assistant Secretary for 
Management at the Treasury Department, in addition to those 
roles, from March 2020 until January 2021, I had the privilege 
of working alongside a small, dedicated team in the office 
every day to design and execute the largest economic rescue 
plan in American history. That experience, during a time of 
profound national challenge, was both humbling and meaningful. 
I was honored to receive the Hamilton Medal, Treasury's highest 
award, from Secretary Mnuchin in recognition of my work at 
Treasury.
    I feel blessed to have had a successful career of more than 
thirty-five years in business. However, I can say without 
hesitation that working and serving the American people at the 
U.S. Treasury Department was the best job I ever had. Having 
previously served in government, I know the sense of purpose 
that public service brings. So when I was asked to return, this 
time to the Department of Energy, I accepted without 
hesitation, and would be honored to serve again, if confirmed. 
Even while working in the private sector, I never lost my drive 
to make a positive impact on my community and the betterment of 
others. I have dedicated significant amounts of my time to 
philanthropy, serving on the boards of various organizations, 
from my university alma mater, to prostate cancer research, to 
pro-Israel advocacy, to Jewish education. Through business and 
philanthropic work, I have been fortunate to travel to dozens 
of countries and sit across the table from heads of state, 
ministers, diplomats, and business leaders. Those experiences 
have given me a deep appreciation for the power of American 
energy and the men and women who produce it to shape our future 
at home and to build peace and prosperity abroad. I 
wholeheartedly embrace this administration's energy dominance 
agenda. If confirmed, I look forward to sharing this vision 
around the world. I believe our abundant energy resources are 
not only an engine of economic growth, but a strategic tool in 
American diplomacy.
    Thank you very much for your time today. I look forward to 
your questions.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Eisner follows:]
    [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]
    
    The Chairman. Thank you, Mr. Eisner.
    Mr. Walsh.

STATEMENT OF TIMOTHY WALSH, NOMINATED TO BE ASSISTANT SECRETARY 
  OF ENERGY FOR ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

    Mr. Walsh. Thank you. Chairman Lee, Ranking Member 
Heinrich, and distinguished members of the Senate Energy and 
Natural Resources Committee, I am honored to appear before you 
as President Trump's nominee to be the next Assistant Secretary 
of Environmental Management at the U.S. Department of Energy. I 
am grateful to President Trump for this nomination, and I seek 
to earn your trust and support today as well. This role holds 
significant responsibilities, and I will bring my extensive 
leadership and management expertise to the world's largest 
environmental cleanup program.
    Before I begin, I would like to thank the most important 
person in my life, Jesus Christ, my Lord and Savior, for the 
many blessings he has bestowed upon me. My amazing wife, Lisa, 
and two awesome children, Alex and Natalie, are here today. 
When Lisa and I married 35 years ago, I was stationed at Fort 
Bragg, North Carolina, where I was a company commander in the 
82nd Airborne Division. Shortly after being married, with 18-
hours' notice, my unit was combat-deployed for Operation Desert 
Shield. As Senator McCormick mentioned, back then he was First 
Lieutenant McCormick. He was my XO. But little did I know that 
I would spend most of my first year of my marriage with Dave 
instead of my wife. I used to call him my roommate, tentmate, 
but anyways, and I am sure Lisa had no idea that as the CO's 
wife, her first year of marriage, as a 27-year-old, would be 
spent taking care of my soldiers' spouses and family members. 
Sacrifices are made, but love endures.
    If confirmed, it will be an honor for me to serve the 
people of this great nation as the leader of Environmental 
Management at the U.S. Department of Energy. My love for the 
United States and passion to serve stems from growing up 
overseas and realizing the exceptionalism of America. My dad 
was a decorated Army soldier who fought in World War II, Korea, 
and Vietnam. In the mid-1950s, he met my mom, who had escaped 
from Soviet East Germany. I am the youngest of five kids, and 
grew accustomed to the adventure of moving every couple of 
years, mostly in Europe and the Middle East. I have always had 
an intellectual curiosity of science and building. This drew me 
to West Point, where I studied civil and mechanical 
engineering. After graduation and Ranger School, I led combat 
engineers in Germany and built construction projects in Turkey 
during the Reagan Cold War buildup.
    After the Army, with a master's degree from Stanford 
University, I began a career in the construction industry, 
building complex, advanced technology facilities for the 
semiconductor industry--aka chip plants--and other industries. 
Realizing there is a better way to deliver construction 
projects more efficiently, faster, and cheaper, I created 
Confluence Builders as a vertically integrated real estate 
development company. I am proud of my company's many 
accomplishments to build over $2.5 billion of landmark real 
estate developments.
    I recognize the significance of Environmental Management's 
mission, and the responsibility of addressing the legacies of 
the Manhattan Project and Cold War nuclear weapons development 
is enormous. Living only 16 miles south of the Rocky Flats in 
Golden, Colorado, I understand the impact these sites have on a 
community. Safe, efficient, and effective cleanup is critical. 
Rocky Flats, however, demonstrates what the Environmental 
Management program can achieve to safely and successfully 
accomplish its cleanup mission. The Manhattan Project's rapid 
development helped end World War II, and subsequent nuclear 
research contributed to preventing further use of nuclear 
weapons. It is now our duty to address legacy waste and ensure 
a safe, secure, and clean environment for all Americans. I 
appreciate the program is also focused on new missions, 
including President Trump's and Secretary Wright's goal of 
creating space for the Golden Era of American Energy.
    My strengths are being a strong leader, building cohesive 
teams, and achieving complex goals. If confirmed, I would bring 
to Environmental Management strategic focus, planning for the 
entire environmental mission to ensure the most pressing risks 
receive maximum attention, and decisive decision-making and 
disciplined project management to ensure accountability and 
results are achieved. Finally, I will bring my collaborative 
spirit and approach to work with all stakeholders, including 
Congress, local communities, and the tribal nations. I am 
honored for this opportunity, and if confirmed, I would be 
grateful for the opportunity to lead the Environmental 
Management team to drive down environmental risks and enable 
U.S. jobs, U.S. security, and U.S. energy.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Walsh follows:]
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    The Chairman. Thank you, Mr. Walsh.
    Ms. Robertson.

   STATEMENT OF AUDREY ROBERTSON, NOMINATED TO BE ASSISTANT 
SECRETARY OF ENERGY FOR ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND RENEWABLE ENERGY, 
                      DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

    Ms. Robertson. Chairman Lee, Ranking Member Heinrich, and 
distinguished members of the Senate Energy and Natural 
Resources Committee, I am honored to appear before you as 
President Trump's nominee to be the next Assistant Secretary of 
Energy for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy. First, I 
would like to thank President Trump for his steadfast 
leadership during this pivotal time in America and for the 
trust and confidence placed in me with his nomination. This 
office plays a critical role in the Department of Energy and 
the tools we will develop as a nation to meet today and 
tomorrow's energy demands. President Trump's nomination deeply 
humbles me, and if I have the honor of being confirmed, serving 
our country and leading this office will be the greatest honor 
of my life.
    I first want to thank my parents, Dr. Scott and Dr. Karen 
Robertson, and my brother, Andrew Robertson, for being here 
today and always believing in me. I also want to thank my 
incredible fiance, retired Green Beret and Silver Star 
recipient, Nathan Buelow, as well as some of my closest friends 
and partners who are here from all over the country. And 
lastly, I want to thank my sons, William and Wyatt. Only 
William can be here today. Wyatt is backpacking through the 
Great Rocky Mountains and has no idea this hearing is taking 
place. He will have to watch it later.
    I have lived a life that is only possible in the United 
States of America. I grew up in Arizona. I went on to earn a 
bachelor of science in applied economics from Cornell 
University, followed by a master's degree in accounting from 
the University of Southern California. My early career in the 
corporate world was foundational to my knowledge of energy 
systems, energy infrastructure, and the complex role of 
companies, markets, banks and governments in the production and 
distribution of energy. Over time, I developed my own ideas 
about energy and how it could be produced more efficiently and 
with less risk. About 10 years ago, I left the comfort of my 
corporate job for an unpredictable life as an entrepreneur. 
Several businesses and partnerships followed. One such business 
I started in 2018 when I co-founded an oil and gas company. As 
a single mom raising two young boys in suburban Denver, I was 
not a stereotypical oil and gas entrepreneur. However, 
successfully producing energy has nothing to do with 
stereotypes. Energy is about numbers and science, two areas 
where I am very comfortable. To me, the numbers added up and 
the science was sound. This was a risk worth taking, and I 
risked everything. We grew this business from non-producing 
leases in beautiful Southeast New Mexico into one of the 
largest private oil companies in America. I am proud of the 
safe and reliable energy we produced and the hundreds of great 
Americans who worked hard alongside us as we developed not only 
oil and gas resources in New Mexico, but we built roads, 
pipelines, and even a microgrid.
    This was not my only entrepreneurial energy endeavor. In my 
home State of Colorado, I partnered with a vertically 
integrated operator of utility-scale solar to transform an 
agricultural property outside of Fort Collins into the largest 
utility-scale solar facility in the state. This 250-megawatt 
project will provide power to tens of thousands of homes in 
northern Colorado. As an investor and board member, I have 
dedicated time and resources to numerous next-generation energy 
technologies, including small modular nuclear, next-generation 
geothermal, and advanced sodium-ion batteries. Advancing 
technologies like these will be critical to meeting our 
nation's growing power demands. President Trump has made it 
clear that we must--and I believe we will--unleash American 
energy to protect our nation and its future. But energy is a 
complex subject, and I believe it is not only inaccurate, but 
incredibly disingenuous to apply labels like ``Clean Energy'' 
and ``Dirty Energy.'' There is only energy, and every source 
and form of energy has trade-offs. I support all forms of 
reliable, affordable, and secure energy.
    If I am so fortunate to be confirmed, I will provide steady 
leadership to this office and make science-based, common-sense 
decisions that will benefit all Americans. If confirmed, it 
will be a privilege to work closely with our national labs, 
especially the National Renewable Energy Lab in my home State 
of Colorado. I am a newcomer to Washington and a novice to 
politics. If confirmed, I also ask for a close partnership with 
this Committee as we work towards an energy-abundant America.
    Thank you for your time and consideration. I look forward 
to your questions.
    [The prepared statement of Ms. Robertson follows:]
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    The Chairman. Mr. Erdos.

STATEMENT OF HON. LANNY ERDOS, NOMINATED TO BE THE DIRECTOR OF 
   THE OFFICE OF SURFACE MINING RECLAMATION AND ENFORCEMENT, 
                   DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

    Mr. Erdos. Chairman Lee, Ranking Member Heinrich, and 
members of the Committee, thank you for the opportunity to 
appear before you today as President Trump's nominee for the 
position of Director of the Office of Surface Mining 
Reclamation and Enforcement, or OSM. I would like to thank 
President Trump and Secretary Burgum for their confidence in 
me. I am excited to be here today to share with you my vision 
for OSM. I appreciate the opportunity to provide insight into 
my background, give you an idea about where I come from, and 
provide a snapshot into my professional career in the public 
and private sectors.
    If confirmed, my nearly 35 years of experience in public 
service at the Department of the Interior and the Ohio 
Department of Natural Resources (Ohio DNR) have prepared me 
well for the position of Director at OSM. Additionally, my 
recent time spent in the private sector as an environmental and 
reclamation manager has given me a unique 360-degree 
perspective of the challenges facing the coal industry. As a 
former Director at OSM, I have working knowledge and specific 
experience in every aspect of OSM's mission, and as a former 
Chief at the Ohio DNR, where I represented Ohio on the 
Interstate Mining Compact Commission for more than a decade, I 
developed both state and federal relationships across the 
country that have proven beneficial throughout my career.
    Most recently, I have worked in the mining industry as 
President and Vice President for two reclamation companies and 
also Vice President for environmental compliance for all the 
associated companies. I am responsible for reclamation and 
remediation of mining permits in Kentucky, Virginia, West 
Virgina, and Alabama. At Cardinal Reclamation, one of the 
reclamation companies that I manage, we have made significant 
reclamation and remediation progress over the past five years. 
In Kentucky, Cardinal stepped up to the plate to assist the 
people of the Commonwealth when permits, affected by another 
permittee, were not properly reclaimed. Today, many of those 
permits (60-plus) have been fully reclaimed and returned to a 
productive post-mining land use.
    As a former Director at OSM, we made important inroads in 
improving relationships with the states, the tribes (where OSM 
is the primary regulator), and the mining industry. Those 
relationships were strained under the previous administration. 
I will work to establish a collaborative and mutually 
beneficial relationship that recognizes the important role that 
the states play relative to regulation within their borders and 
just as importantly recognizes the importance of the energy 
that is provided by our coal industry. At the Ohio DNR, I began 
my career as an environmental technician. I was soon promoted 
to Reclamation Inspector, where for seven years I was 
responsible for inspections associated with coal and industrial 
mineral mining. I later transferred to the abandoned mine land 
program, or AML, as a design specialist. Working under the 
supervision of a registered professional engineer, I designed 
AML remediation projects, such as highwall backfills, surface 
subsidence caused by pre-law underground mining, coal refuse 
reclamation projects, and stream restoration, to name just a 
few. I was also a Permitting Manager, where my responsibilities 
included oversight of all coal and industrial mineral mining 
applications.
    Later, I was promoted to Deputy Chief responsible for 
managing the state's coal, industrial minerals, and mine safety 
programs. My responsibilities included statewide management of 
nearly a thousand permits, and the protection, training, and 
certification of the state's mining workforce. Three years 
later, I was promoted to Chief. I maintained my Deputy Chief 
responsibilities and assumed management of the AML program. As 
Chief, I worked with federal partners, such as the U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency, the Office of Surface Mining, 
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and the Mine Safety and 
Health Administration, to name just a few.
    From a personal perspective, I come from a very strong-
willed, blue-collar background where family comes first. From a 
very young age, my mother and father instilled in my brother, 
sister, and me the lesson that hard work is important. They led 
by example and taught us this lesson through their own hard 
work. My father worked for nearly 30 years in an underground 
coal mine. And although it was an incredibly difficult job, he 
enjoyed it, as well as the life it provided his family. My 
mother worked as a cook at the local school and later worked in 
the county court system. They both worked hard to support their 
family, and seeing that day after day stuck with me.
    My wife, Rhonda, of 37 years, and I have tried to instill 
much of the same in our children, Courtney and Jordan. I have 
tremendous respect for the men and the women who mine the coal 
that helps to supply the country's energy needs. An energy need 
that will only continue to grow in the coming years. But I also 
understand the need to protect our land and water. Striking 
that environmental balance, as I have tried to do throughout my 
career, ensures the protection of our natural resources while 
also recognizing the ever-increasing energy consumption of the 
country. If confirmed, it would be an honor to serve the 
citizens of this great country as Director of the Office of 
Surface Mining.
    Thank you for today's opportunity. I look forward to 
answering your questions.
    [The prepared statement of Mr. Erdos follows:]
    [GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]
    
    The Chairman. Thank you very much.
    We will now proceed to five-minute rounds of questions. I 
will ask the first round, followed by Senator Heinrich, and 
then we will alternate between Republicans and Democrats after 
that in just a moment.
    All right, Mr. Erdos, I would like to start with you, if 
that is all right.
    Last time you were before this Committee, and that was 
regarding your nomination to be the Director of the Office of 
Surface Mining Reclamation Enforcement, I asked you about 
permitting deadlines for coal mines. And at that point--this 
was in 2019--you said you were looking to reduce the timelines 
for permitting from six to ten years down to two or less years. 
This would be a really welcome set of news if we could do that, 
including and especially for mines in Utah, some of which have 
spent literally decades in a sort of permitting purgatory 
process. So why is certainty, in your opinion, so important 
when it comes to the permitting process, especially for mines 
and for miners?
    Mr. Erdos. Well, certainly, predictability is something the 
industry has to have. They have to know how to get from Point A 
to Point B. And permitting has been an issue. So I think we are 
talking about NEPA reviews on coal--on federal coal--and that's 
what I was referring to back in 2019. So I think, obviously, 
progress has been made over the last two to three months. Two 
or three have been--OSM has approved the EIS and record of 
decision. So the short answer is predictability. The industry 
needs predictability, and the way you get that is--the way you 
achieve that is by having a permitting system that functions 
for everyone--it functions for the states, it functions for the 
Federal Government, and for the operator.
    The Chairman. Thank you.
    Mr. Walsh, the Department of Energy currently holds about 
30 metric tons of defense plutonium that it plans to dilute and 
then dispose of at the WIPP facility in New Mexico. This 
strategy is projected to take over 30 years and to cost about 
$20 billion. Now, think about it, we are spending $20 billion 
to dispose of this valuable asset that was produced at taxpayer 
expense. I don't know what the exact figures are, but I am 
willing to guess that in present day dollars it costs tens of 
billions of dollars to create it.
    One of President Trump's recent executive orders directs 
the Department to end the dilute and dispose strategy and 
establish a program to process the plutonium into a form that 
can be fabricated into fuel for advanced nuclear reactors. This 
would allow the plutonium to be used as a resource to advance 
nuclear technology leadership in the world, while still 
accomplishing our non-proliferation objectives, which I think 
were part of what they had in mind when they started this 
program. Do you agree that the surplus plutonium should be used 
to support the commercial nuclear industry? And if confirmed, 
will you work with the Secretary and with NNSA to end the 
dilute and dispose program and carry out President Trump's 
executive order?
    Mr. Walsh. Yes, I will. As I understand it, plutonium can 
be mixed with other materials so that it isn't--essentially, to 
proliferation proof it, and as you know, to fuel the future of 
AI so America can be a leader with the data centers located 
here, we need energy from every source. And small modular 
reactors and all nuclear reactors, for that matter, their 
limiting factor right now is fuel--enriched uranium--which 
we're not doing here in the United States, and I think it ends 
in 2028. So we need to bring all dense energy sources like 
plutonium, and I believe NNSA is also working on a program 
right now where we can use that.
    The Chairman. Thank you.
    Mr. Eisner, the past administration relied on the 
Department of Energy's International Affairs Office to broker 
deals on climate cooperation in the development of more 
expensive and unreliable energy resources. If confirmed, how do 
you plan to reorient the office to focus on American energy 
dominance and energy security for our allies?
    Mr. Eisner. Mr. Chairman, as I stated in my opening 
remarks, it was an honor for me to serve at the U.S. Department 
of the Treasury in the previous Trump administration. In that 
role, I had the honor to work with several career federal 
employees, two of whom are here with me today. Two things that 
I think really marked my experience with these individuals was 
their patriotism and their respect that elections have 
consequences. Despite what I was sure was a very wide range of 
political views among those whom I worked with, we operated 
under a very basic understanding that the work that we were 
doing was not red and it was not blue. It was red, white, and 
blue. And we used that approach to motivate the people who 
worked with me, because at the end of the day, it really does 
come down to leadership. We were able to effectuate the 
policies and the programs of the previous Trump administration 
without flaw, I would say.
    The Chairman. Thank you.
    And finally, Ms. Robertson, as geothermal technology has 
continued to advance, energy analysts have become increasingly 
bullish and appropriately very excited about its viability to 
supply sustained power. As I am sure you are aware, I 
introduced bipartisan legislation with Ranking Member Heinrich 
to accelerate the adoption of geothermal technology. I included 
provisions of that legislation in the energy title of the One 
Big Beautiful Bill, but unfortunately, my Democrat colleagues 
used the Byrd Rule to strip those provisions out of that bill, 
so those weren't able to make it into law, even though they 
could have under that circumstance. Nonetheless, given the 
circumstances, we must to continue to focus on finding ways to 
develop this energy resource.
    Will you commit, if confirmed, to assisting the Secretary 
to ensure that product classes are used to protect features--
I'm sorry, I have blended two different questions there. What 
can you tell us about the importance of geothermal energy, and 
what can we do from a legal and regulatory standpoint to help 
advance that technology?
    Ms. Robertson. Thank you, Chairman Lee, for that question.
    Geothermal is undoubtedly one of the most exciting 
resources that can create stable, baseload power in this 
country between--the three geothermal powerhouses are right in 
front of me, with Utah, Nevada, and New Mexico really leading 
the way. Geothermal is so exciting and rightly a focus of both 
Secretary Wright and President Trump because, unlike many other 
non fossil-based energy sources, geothermal has the potential 
to provide stable, baseload power, which, as we look at the 
power demands in the United States over the next five, ten, and 
twenty years, we are in a situation we haven't been in as a 
country before. We have had relatively stable electricity 
demand over the years, relatively stable and increasing, 
obviously, power demand, but with the development of 
supercomputers and AI, we need to drastically, significantly 
ramp-up our baseload power, and geothermal provides one of the 
most exciting avenues to do that.
    I am sure Senator Heinrich is very familiar with the XGS 
Energy and Meta project in New Mexico that was announced. This 
is new geothermal technology. That particular project's pipe-
in-pipe technology that is free from using additional water in 
the process, you know, programs like those and many of the 
others being developed at national labs across the country are 
going to be a more sustainable solution to step function 
changes in how we deliver power.
    The Chairman. Great. Thank you very much.
    Senator Heinrich.
    Senator Heinrich. Thank you, Chairman.
    I want to start just by addressing something you said, Mr. 
Walsh, and this is not to quibble with you, but I want to point 
out that in New Mexico we actually produce enriched uranium, 
and it supplies roughly 25 to 30 percent of the demand in the 
country. I think that is a good example of what we should be 
expanding around the country in order to meet additional 
demand.
    I am going to start my questions with you, Ms. Robertson, 
and I was glad to hear your description of some of the solar 
projects that you executed in Colorado. I have been looking 
closely at NERC's 2025 Summer Reliability Assessment in Texas. 
Texas added seven gigawatts of solar power in 2024--nearly 
seven and a half gigawatts of battery storage in 2024 alone--
which is helping the state meet growing electricity demand from 
AI and data centers and some of the things that you have 
articulated. As a result of those additional capacities, the 
risk of power emergencies has dropped to just three percent now 
as opposed to 15 percent a little over a year ago.
    So Ms. Robertson, do you agree that in the face of rising 
demand, that the grid requires more, not less affordable, 
reliable, energy?
    Ms. Robertson. Oh, undoubtedly, the grid demands, and we 
need to deliver more reliable, affordable, secure energy. Are 
you specifically asking about best systems or solar systems?
    Senator Heinrich. So looking at Texas, would you agree that 
deploying both energy storage in tandem with renewable energy 
technologies can actually increase grid reliability, hold 
prices down, and add new generation sources?
    Ms. Robertson. It certainly has the capability to do that. 
Texas still relies primarily on natural gas as its baseload 
power, and that has to be the baseload and the maximum, because 
solar plus batteries can provide a number of benefits, both as 
a large scale and a small scale, but we have yet to see the 
five- to ten-year implications of these large battery systems, 
which, unfortunately, or ironically, the environments that are 
wonderful for solar, like Texas, are not great for batteries. 
And so, battery degradation and the lifetime of a utility-scale 
battery is something that is going to be a further effort of my 
Department, if I am so fortunate to be confirmed. But those 
technologies have yet to play out.
    Senator Heinrich. I would beg to differ. In New Mexico, we 
were an early adopter of grid-scale storage. At this point in 
my personal grid in the Albuquerque area, we're not only 35 
percent solar, seven percent nuclear, 15 percent wind, but 
using 15 percent battery storage. We have been able for a 
number of years now to maintain a high level of reliability--
and not just a high level of reliability, but a low retail 
cost, which is the other thing that American consumers care 
about. I pay about 10.8 cents. Now, I rarely pay that because I 
have solar on my roof at a scale that I don't get an electric 
bill most months, but when I do, I pay 10.8 cents, which is, if 
you look at the country as a whole, much lower than what you 
see in the Midwest and the East.
    Mr. Walsh, the Waste Isolation Pilot Project (WIPP) in New 
Mexico is the sole, as you know, only geological repository 
licensed to store transuranic radioactive waste. It is one of 
three globally. We are currently working to refurbish and 
repair parts of the lift system that is used to bring up mined 
salt out of the ground. Two other lifts, one used for 
transporting TRU waste, the other used for emergency purposes, 
are in need of repair and replacement.
    So talk to me a little bit. I know you are familiar with 
that facility. It is our only facility that serves this 
purpose. Describe to the Committee your commitment to 
overseeing the swift construction and rehabilitation of the 
elevator systems at the WIPP facility.
    Mr. Walsh. Yes, thank you, Senator Heinrich, for that 
question.
    I am very familiar with the WIPP and its importance to 
Environmental Management's cleanup across the DOE's complex. 
And as you mentioned, the lift system, I think, dates back to 
the early 1900s. It came from a mine in Colorado. So, it's 
absolutely in need of repair, and I would be happy to look into 
that. As you know, I am not confirmed yet, so I haven't looked 
at the details of the current budget, but I will ensure, 
because it is such an important facility to our mission, that 
we will make sure we have a serviceable lift system.
    Senator Heinrich. I look forward to following up with you, 
Mr. Walsh.
    Mr. Walsh. Thank you.
    Senator Heinrich. Yes.
    The Chairman. Senator Justice, you are up next.
    Senator Justice. Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Ranking 
Member. Thank all of you all for coming. I mean, really and 
truly, when it really boils right down to it, you are great 
witnesses, you are great nominees, and really and truly, I am 
anxious to be able to see you confirmed because I know you'll 
do fabulous work. That's all there is to it.
    I welcome your families. I am extremely impressed with just 
this--your acknowledgement of God in your life. I mean, it is 
absolutely just what we should all be doing, in my opinion, all 
the time because the blessings are unbelievable. You know, we 
see the tragedies all across our nation. We see what's going on 
in Texas right now, and it just jerks your heart out. I mean, 
that's just all there is to it. But, and please, God above, 
some way, somehow, you know, look after those folks.
    But I would just tell you just this--you know, I am, for 
all practical purposes, the new kid in town, but I have been an 
energy kid for a long, long, long time. And really and truly, 
it is an honor beyond belief to be on this Committee. And why 
would you think that? I mean, really and truly, I have tons to 
do in my life, and why would that be such an unbelievable honor 
for me? And it's simply just this--I have said this until I am 
blue-green--energy is everything. Energy is everything. It's in 
every part of every single thing that we do. And our country 
today needs you like you can't imagine. Every single last bit 
of you, we need you.
    And so, you know, when I was the Governor, I was the 
Governor of West Virginia and I had the honor to be that for 
eight years. And I embraced all the energy forms because I knew 
what was coming. Right around the corner here we are going to 
have a meltdown on energy in this country. And if we don't 
watch out, we are going to be in a real mess. And then, we are 
going to have to make decisions. We are going to need to decide 
where we can have that, but we can't have this. And America 
doesn't normally do that. And if we can't have this, we are 
going to be at a real disadvantage that could be a national 
defense disadvantage or whatever it may be.
    Now, the only other tidbit I would say about embracing all 
is, let's just have a fair playing field. I mean, for God's 
sakes-a-livin', let's not give one form, you know, so many 
benefits and perks and everything and take away from another. 
And please, to God above, let's quit thinking of coal as a bad 
word. Our coal miners work so hard. And Mr. Erdos, you know, 
just talked about his dad--30 years in the coal mines and 
everything in an underground mine. Right at this moment, right 
this very second, there are people that are thousands and 
thousands of feet underground in coal seams where they cannot 
hardly sit up, and in no way they could stand up. They may be 
in 40 inches of coal, thousands of feet underground, for all of 
us, for absolutely all of us. They're good people. They're 
family people. We need them. My good Lord above, we need them 
today.
    So, let's quit thinking and blowing our own legs off and 
letting the world on some righteous movement, you know, that we 
are going to blow our own legs off and have China build a coal-
fired power plant every other day. It's ridiculous. It's 
totally ridiculous. I would tell all of you just this: we are 
so lucky to have you. Your experience is off the chart. Your 
service is off the chart, and I am very, very anxious to work 
with you in every way.
    I really only have one question, and it came to me from the 
Coal Association, and so this is for Mr. Erdos. And I wish you 
would call me Jim. I would like to call all of you by your 
first names, Lanny, or whatever it may be. And so, but with all 
that being said, the question was just this: In West Virginia--
this is from the Coal Association and Chris, this is from Chris 
Hamilton. He's a good guy and he is asking this question and he 
wanted me to ask it.
    In West Virginia--West Virginia has nine program amendments 
pending approval at OSM today. The oldest is 16 years old. And 
in most of these cases, the state rules, we have complied 
exactly with the language of the Office of Surface Mining. So 
my question is real quick. Will you just look? Will you just 
try to help and look, because we need you?
    Mr. Erdos. Thank you for the question, Senator. Yes, 
absolutely, I will. Program amendments are a problem. It has 
been a problem for 10 to 15 years at OSM. And I know Chris 
very, very well. And I am familiar with some of those program 
amendments. So one of the things we will do, if I am fortunate 
enough to get confirmed, I will be briefed by staff, day one, 
relative to program amendments. It's important to me too. Ohio 
has one probably 12 years old that has been sitting there.
    So there are things that we need to do at OSM to fix that, 
and it can be fixed, and we were working on that under the 
previous administration, the Trump administration, when I was 
there. So we will do those things and we will get that backlog 
down. And I absolutely will look at those.
    Senator Justice. Thank you. And I'm sorry that you have to 
put up with Chris.
    Mr. Erdos. He is a great guy. Like you said, he is a great 
guy.
    [Laughter.]
    Senator Justice. Thank you all. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    The Chairman. Senator Hickenlooper.
    Senator Hickenlooper. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thanks to each 
of you for being here at a really challenging time for energy 
in our country.
    Ms. Robertson, let me just say that I always appreciate 
people with a strong athletic background, but if you can be 
that good in water polo, that has to be a remarkable testament 
to your endurance and your ability to put up with all this 
rigmarole, but you are going into a really tough position, if 
confirmed. I know NREL, Colorado's renewable energy lab, is 
truly a world-class hub of reliable energy and innovation. It's 
a major employer in Colorado, but it adds real value, yet the 
President's budget appears to want to cut over half the staff, 
and there is some shifting of funds that, to some, appears 
unlawful. I have a lawyer in our office that feels that it is 
unlawful. I think there are a lot of lawyers that are looking 
at that. It doesn't appear to me that you can just reassign 
experts and fill in the gaps.
    So I guess my first question is, are you willing to commit 
to preventing, to the best of your capability, significant 
staff cuts at NREL and to really make sure we maintain those 
research capabilities?
    Ms. Robertson. Senator Hickenlooper, thank you for the 
question, and I agree with you that NREL is an extraordinary 
hub of innovation and that the best tools we are going to have 
to make a stronger, better, more energized America are going to 
come through innovation. It's not just going to come from, you 
know, additional subsidies. It's going to come from big, 
innovative changes to the way we do things and the way we 
create energy. You asked a few specific questions, and let me 
try and answer them. I have not been in the Department of 
Energy. I am still living in Colorado and riding horses with my 
kids and hanging out for the summer, and at the point where I 
hopefully am confirmed, I look forward to being briefed on a 
number of the matters that you brought up regarding the budget, 
but I am not informed at this point in time or in a position 
where I can comment on that. I will tell you that I always 
follow the law, and I intend to follow the law, the advice of 
counsel, and if I am so fortunate to be confirmed, hold this 
office with the dignity that it deserves, and from a legal 
perspective, always do the right thing.
    As it relates to staff cuts at EERE or NREL, you are a 
business owner, you have been a business owner, and a mayor and 
a Governor, and thank you for that. I can't comment until I get 
in to see what the situation is, but I can commit to be an 
advocate for the great men and women working across the 
Department of Energy in the areas where I will have 
responsibility, if confirmed, especially at NREL, where we have 
some of the best scientists in the world working to solve the 
world's biggest problems.
    Senator Hickenlooper. Well, I couldn't agree more, and I 
appreciate that. Well spoken. I will just put in there, I mean, 
we are going to see this massive surge in demand that I think 
each of you have recognized and described, and it's hard to 
imagine bringing online more natural gas, more coal, more 
almost anything in the short term in the next five years, and 
yet we do have a huge inventory of solar, but electricity can 
be generated from wind and solar, increasingly geothermal, as 
you have all recognized. I think 95 percent of all the projects 
in the queue are either, you know, solar, wind, or storage. And 
I would like to ask each of you just to, because you each--
well, maybe not the mining reclamation, I will pass on that. 
Although, I am--I will not have time to ask questions on the 
mining. I will come back for a second round of questions on 
that and get to that.
    But 95 percent of the energy that's available is solar, 
wind, and batteries. Do you think we should prioritize that and 
really push that through? And I am going to start with Ms. 
Robertson.
    Ms. Robertson. Senator Hickenlooper, thank you for the 
question, and it is the question. I mean, a large-scale data 
center consumes the same amount of electricity as two million 
homes. And we will have to produce a lot of electrons in order 
to meet that demand. But the question of how do we prioritize 
it? We have to prioritize reliable, secure, and affordable 
power in that equation. I think you mentioned NREL earlier, 
grid modernization, new technologies to help reduce the loss of 
electricity within the process. I do believe we will be able to 
bring online very successful, innovative energy sources, like 
geothermal, hopefully small modular nuclear, in a much shorter 
period of time than previously envisioned, even 12 months ago.
    Senator Hickenlooper. Right, well, I am out of time, but in 
the meantime, we are going to have some real pressure on us for 
these five years before we get to the small nuclear and being 
able to scale up some of those other things. And I think, you 
know, the budget that has been put out there is cutting the 
Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy 62 percent 
below 2019 levels. So long before President Biden was in 
office, that budget was much more robust than it is now. So, 
you are probably going to have to elbow your way in to some 
making sure that those funds are not all eliminated because you 
are going to need some of that money, I think.
    I yield back to the Chair.
    The Chairman. Great, thank you.
    All right, let's go ahead and begin our second round.
    Mr. Erdos, I would like to start the second round with you. 
You know, you began your career as an environmental technician 
reviewing mine data and maps for accuracy. Since then, you have 
had years of experience working with environmental agencies and 
related stakeholders, as well as on abandoned mine lands 
(AML)--I am always cautious when I say mine lands to not say 
land mines because it turns out they mean very different 
things--reclamation efforts, and funding disbursement. How does 
the coal industry contribute to AML funding and remediation 
efforts?
    Mr. Erdos. Well, there are two streams of funds that go 
into AML. One is fee-based. It's how the industry contributes. 
So currently, I believe it's 22.4 cents for surface coal that's 
not lignite, 9.6 cents for underground coal not lignite, and I 
want to say 6.4 cents for lignite coal. So it's based on 
tonnage produced, and they pay that fee on that tonnage. It 
goes into that particular pool of money for the AML program. 
And then you have the IIJA, which is a whole different issue. 
So you have those two streams.
    The Chairman. Thank you.
    Ms. Robertson, let's talk about appliance regulations. 
There are a series of regulations that are implemented and 
enforced by the Department of Energy's Office of Energy 
Efficiency and Renewable Energy. Some of these regulations, one 
might say, impose pretty costly burdens on all Americans and 
they certainly reduce market choices. Some would say that in 
many instances they have, in the name of efficiency, just 
produced products that don't work as well and that end up 
having to be used two or three cycles at a time instead of one, 
perhaps resulting in no net energy savings at all, but making 
appliances less reliable, harder to use, more expensive, and 
more difficult to repair, and they affect almost all appliances 
in American homes, from refrigerators, dishwashers, clothes 
washers, clothes dryers. Now, the process rule and its product 
class protections, which allow for separate regulations for 
different product features, were overwhelmingly ignored by the 
previous administration, and this has stopped the development 
of helpful features on appliances and essentially killed 
certain appliances or household goods, like the incandescent 
lightbulb, which itself is a different thing. Sure, we have 
other types of lightbulbs available, but for the most part, you 
can't get incandescent lightbulbs anymore, and that is a 
different product, and sometimes you need those.
    And so, this is somewhat concerning. Will you commit, if 
confirmed, to assisting the Secretary to ensure that product 
classes are used to protect features on appliances that are 
important to American consumers?
    Ms. Robertson. Chairman Lee, thank you for that important 
question. And absolutely, I think I am here--and I believe my 
panelists here alongside me--we are here because we love 
America and we love Americans, and putting burdensome, costly 
regulations in place that don't have a net benefit to 
individual Americans can price people out of the American 
dream, depending on appliances, building standards. It's an 
area within the EERE that I am very much looking forward to 
working with, and I look forward to working with you and your 
staff on any specific issues or things that we should be 
advancing.
    The Chairman. Thank you.
    Mr. Erdos, let's go back to you for a moment. Can you speak 
to the relationship between states with primacy under SMCRA and 
OSM?
    Mr. Erdos. Thank you for the question, Senator. Certainly. 
So there are 24 states that currently have primacy, or they 
have approved state programs. They are the primary regulators 
within their borders. OSM is an oversight program relative to 
those states. OSM is the primary regulator on Indian tribes, 
and there are a few others where OSM has a federal program, but 
only one actually produces coal, and that is Tennessee. The 
primacy states, within their borders, they are the primary 
regulators. OSM is an oversight program. It's a partnership, 
really, but deference should be given to the states, and it is 
given to the states.
    The Chairman. Do you think the 10-day notice rule overwrote 
the authority of the state mining offices?
    Mr. Erdos. Somewhat, it did. The 2020 and the 2024 rules 
were significantly different. So the 2020 rule required OSM to 
work with the states. So if they received a citizen complaint, 
they were required to coordinate with the state prior to acting 
on that citizen complaint, which makes a lot of sense. I am a 
state guy. I come from a state, I worked there for 31 years, 
and I was on the other end of those 10-day notices. So it makes 
sense for OSM to work with the state and gather as much 
information as they can prior to acting on that. So the 2024 
rule took that away, which is pretty significant to me.
    So to answer your question, I think, to some extent, it 
did.
    The Chairman. Thank you.
    Senator Murkowski, you are up to bat.
    Senator Murkowski. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Thank you for your willingness to step forward in these 
important positions. We appreciate that.
    Ms. Robertson, I wanted to ask a question of you first 
here. I come from a state where, when we say all-of-the-above 
energy policy, we really mean it, not because it's a good 
catchword, but because we are islanded. This huge state, our 
energy system is all islanded in the sense that we have very 
little when it comes to the grid beyond the Railbelt there. So 
people think about Alaska as oil and gas. It's great. It's 
important. Significant for us. It's important for the country 
and the world. But we can't do it without also tapping into 
those resources that happen to be right there where that 
community is. And so, that means a little bit of solar. It 
means a little bit of wind. It means maybe we can really do 
something bold like geothermal.
    And so, the position that you are nominated to as Assistant 
Secretary of Energy for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy 
is important. I have communities that are reliant right now on 
diesel-powered generation. That's how they stay warm. That's 
how they keep the lights on. And so, when the barge doesn't 
make it in, or when the price of fuel goes through the roof, it 
squeezes everything else that these individuals have available 
to them for their families.
    And so, I look at some of the things that we are doing here 
to help facilitate some of these smaller microgrid solutions as 
vitally, vitally important. We had a debate, certainly, before 
the Senate last week when it came to certain of the tax credits 
for our solar and wind projects. We negotiated a little bit 
longer runway for wind and solar tax credits in reconciliation. 
It wasn't much, but it's going to help allow for the 
facilitation of a couple of projects--maybe a good handful of 
projects to proceed--and then, we just see at the beginning of 
this week an executive order coming out of the White House 
that, as I read it, really, really guts the effort for a 
compromise that we were able to secure within that 
reconciliation bill. So, I don't really like it. I will just be 
blunt. I don't really like it at all. And I don't like it 
because, not only does it undercut the arrangement that we were 
able to work, but also because it leaves these communities that 
I represent with no solution other than barging in or flying in 
more diesel to keep the lights on and to keep them warm.
    So I acknowledge and appreciate the role that the Office of 
EERE has played in really being this partner to promote energy 
security for rural communities that experience limited access 
to these alternate baseload energy resources. So I just need 
your commitment that you will work with us to understand what 
the local solutions are and help to facilitate them, because 
what happens back here in Washington, DC isn't going to 
translate to these rural communities that I have in my state. 
So can you commit to me that you are going to work with us on 
some of these solutions?
    Ms. Robertson. Senator Murkowski, first of all, I love 
Alaska. I have spent lots of time in Alaska, and I ardently 
believe that energy in rural communities and in isolated 
communities has many different constraints than the energy we 
are talking about to power a data center in Arlington. And 
energy is everything, and delivering energy to a remote 
community in Alaska may look very different than the energy 
solutions we would work toward in other communities in other 
places in the United States.
    I have particular experience with this. I have built a 
company in rural New Mexico, and we didn't have any power. We 
did not have access to the power--to Xcel in New Mexico. They 
gave us a three-year wait list, a three-year timeline. So we 
decided that we needed to take matters into our own hands and 
we had novel solutions to treating field gas onsite to using 
our own gas-fired turbines, and we built our own microgrid. 
These were solutions that we needed to come up with because we 
faced a challenge. I understand that the rural communities in 
Alaska face challenges, and I absolutely commit to you to work 
as a partner in figuring out the right energy solution for that 
very unique environment.
    Senator Murkowski. Well, I appreciate that. I look forward 
to working with you on that, whether it's wind, solar, whether 
it's geothermal. We have had some good engagement with our 
tribal communities on the geothermal side. I am also concerned 
about the President's budget proposal on elimination of the 
weatherization program. Again, whether you are from Alaska, 
where it's cold, or New Mexico, where it's hot, weatherization 
is going to be key for us as well.
    My time is expired, but I appreciate the opportunity to 
work with you on some of these very important issues and to the 
rest of you as well. We have some good projects, Mr. Eisner, I 
will probably want to talk to you about our Alaska natural gas 
opportunities and Arctic energy as well in the international 
space.
    Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    The Chairman. Thank you.
    Senator Padilla.
    Senator Padilla. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Good morning to all of you. I am going to focus my 
questions--surprise, surprise--on EERE. The U.S. Department of 
Energy's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy has 
had a strong connection and collaboration with the State of 
California for many, many years. California prides itself on 
being on the forefront of energy innovation. This partnership 
supports the state's growth to advance new and innovative 
energy technologies, including in areas of research and 
development, demonstration projects, and financial incentives 
as well, particularly in areas like energy efficiency, 
renewable energy sources and biofuels, and the storage 
technologies and capacity it has to accompany some of the newer 
technologies to address concerns about intermittency and 
beyond. So all of these represent key efforts, not just to 
reduce emissions, but ultimately to also lower electricity 
bills and make energy more abundant.
    With that being established, a question for Ms. Robertson--
if you are confirmed, will you commit to honoring the 
previously awarded grants and funding that have been already 
acted upon with the State of California?
    Ms. Robertson. Thank you, Senator Padilla, for the 
question.
    I am not yet in the office. What I can confirm to you is 
that I will follow the law and the commitments of the U.S. 
Government as is my intention if I am so fortunate to be in 
that role.
    Senator Padilla. Okay.
    Ms. Robertson. I do know that the Office of Energy 
Efficiency and Renewable Energy has over 2,000 active projects, 
and that the review of those projects is something Secretary 
Wright has initiated as an ongoing matter, and if I am so 
fortunate to be confirmed sometime this year, I would 
absolutely love to look at those and be happy to work with you 
and your office on those that touch California.
    Senator Padilla. Okay. So again, just, I prefaced my 
question with if you are confirmed, so I am not getting ahead 
of myself, but again, these are projects that are not under 
review, not recently applied for, these were applications that 
have been reviewed and awarded. I just want to make sure that 
those awards are honored going forward.
    I will give an example. One of the awards was to help fund 
cutting-edge marine pumped hydroelectric storage systems at the 
Port of Los Angeles. You may be familiar with the Port of Los 
Angeles. The Port of Los Angeles and Long Beach combined 
represent 40 percent of the commerce coming in out of the 
United States in that one port complex alone. Would you be 
supportive of innovative energy technologies like EERE's Water 
Power Technologies Office?
    Ms. Robertson. Thank you, Senator Padilla. I am very 
excited to learn more and participate in the Water Power 
Technologies Office. I think that is an exciting area of EERE, 
and one I am, if I am so fortunate to be confirmed, I am very 
excited to work in.
    Senator Padilla. Good. Well, I highlight this one because I 
wasn't physically present for your opening remarks. I did catch 
it from my office. I also have seen your written testimony as 
well, and you are excited, you are committed. I am excited and 
I am committed. But we also have the new challenge of meeting 
these objectives, striving for these goals with a President's 
budget proposal that would cut EERE's resources by more than 
half. So we are going to have to figure out how to square 
those--do more with less.
    Another award from EERE was a demonstration project in 
California to support new load growth through grid innovations 
and to support the ability of energy providers to right-size 
grid investments for future load growth. As electricity demand 
grows and we seek to meet that demand, both because of our 
growing population as well as our growing economy, this is not 
the time to stop funding grid innovation, but the 
administration, the Trump administration, has been very vocal 
about meeting the projected growth in electricity demand, but 
proposes a 74 percent budget cut to EERE. How do you do that? 
How do you go about that, if you are fortunate enough to be 
confirmed?
    Ms. Robertson. I think it's a matter of austerity across 
the Federal Government and having to do more with less. I don't 
think that changes the President's bold agenda for energy and 
grid enhancements. Grid innovation is a component of President 
Trump's vision of how we create a more secure America. We have 
a very fragile grid, and it's not just within EERE that issues 
of the grid are tackled and are challenged, it is across our 
national labs. It is in the Office of Electricity in the Grid 
Deployment Office. There are multiple touchpoints within the 
Department that, if I am fortunate enough to be confirmed and 
be in the building, I look forward to a lot of cross-
collaboration to solve these issues because those are big 
issues.
    Senator Padilla. I am glad to at least hear you say the 
grid is fragile in so many ways in so many areas, in large part 
because it's an old grid.
    Ms. Robertson. Yes----
    Senator Padilla. So if you are going to address deferred 
maintenance, if you are going to modernize, if you are going to 
add capacity, if you are going to add efficiency and improve 
performance, these are all objectives that require investments, 
not cuts.
    Thank you.
    The Chairman. Senator Cortez Masto.
    Senator Cortez Masto. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Welcome, congratulations to all the nominees. Welcome to 
all of your family members. It's always fun to be here on the 
first day. It's the second or third day that we will have 
conversations about, but thank you so much.
    I want to start off by talking a little bit about Nevada 
because Nevada has done an incredible job leaning into the 
potential for energy, and particularly around solar, 
geothermal, and hydro. I mean, there is so much happening in 
Nevada right now, and it is an example of what our future can 
be if we want to be energy independent, including, I want to 
say, battery storage.
    Ms. Robertson, I invite you to come to Nevada to see what 
is happening with battery storage there because it is part of 
the baseload, and it's happening right now. My frustration is 
that, unfortunately, under this administration, we are picking 
winners and losers. And we are saying to states like Nevada, 
based on our geography and our opportunities, that even though 
solar is one of our number one commodities, that we shouldn't 
even look at it anymore. And I think an all-of-the-above energy 
approach should be based on what each state is capable of doing 
based on their geography, their minerals, whatever is available 
for them. And I am here to tell you, in Nevada, it really is 
around solar, geothermal, hydro, and there is so much more 
happening there, but that's different than the New England 
states. That's even different than Texas. So I am not about 
picking winners and losers, I am looking for a balanced 
approach here, and I am just disappointed that this 
administration and some of my colleagues have gutted and cut 
wind and solar and now are doing the same around battery 
storage, electric vehicles, and critical minerals.
    And we are going to talk about this because critical 
minerals are key to our technology future. And if we're not 
also leaning in and making sure that this country is capable of 
producing those critical minerals, we are going to be left 
behind in our energy independence, as well as our national 
security. But I want to start with Ms. Robertson, with you. 
According to recent projections from the U.S. Energy 
Information Administration, retail energy prices will continue 
to increase beyond 2026, and additional reports have assessed 
that cuts to clean energy tax credits, like those made in the 
recently enacted GOP reconciliation law, could result in 
Americans paying as much as $110 more on their utility bills. 
And despite these increased energy rates, the administration 
has proposed to zero-out crucial energy assistance programs in 
their Fiscal Year 2026 budget, including EERE's Energy-to-Grid 
Integration Program.
    And so, I want to talk to you about that. Can you explain 
the benefits that cutting grid energy programs or even energy 
assistance programs provides for Americans? I mean, is this 
where we should be going if we are looking at integrating our 
grid with all of the potential energy sources that are out 
there? And I appreciate your comments that there are trade-offs 
with all of them, but why pick winners and losers?
    Ms. Robertson. Senator Cortez Masto, I don't believe in 
picking winners and losers. I do believe that energy is about 
science and energy is about numbers. And I don't have any 
feelings or belief structures around energy. It is--they are 
equations, and delivering for the American people is going to 
require us to be thoughtful and tactical. It's going to lean 
into the science and try to advance some of the technologies 
that, frankly, Nevada is leading in. You have one of the 
leading geothermal potentials, and an existing share of your 
utility comes from geothermal.
    Senator Cortez Masto. But for that reason, energy grid 
integration is so important, wouldn't you agree?
    Ms. Robertson. I agree with the importance. You asked a 
question specifically about the budget. It is very difficult 
for me to comment on how the budget is allocated, how it works 
today. I am not in the building. I am still living in Colorado. 
This is not exactly an area where I have oversight or domain 
knowledge, but I do know that grid integration is a component 
of the Department of Energy across multiple departments, across 
multiple national labs, and it's a priority for the President 
and it's a priority for Secretary Wright, because without the 
grid, we don't have energy distribution.
    Senator Cortez Masto. Thank you. I have about 30 seconds 
left and I want to just get this question in. The rest I will 
submit for the record. Thank you all for being here.
    But Mr. Walsh, it goes without saying, but timely and 
transparent communication is crucial to the success of DOE's 
environmental management program in Nevada. I welcome you to 
come out there and take a look at what's going on. If 
confirmed, do I have your commitment to prioritize an open 
relationship with myself and our state officials on all DOE 
environmental management activities in Nevada?
    Mr. Walsh. Yes, Senator Cortez Masto----
    Senator Cortez Masto. And will you pledge to uphold all 
existing agreements and contracts with the State of Nevada?
    Mr. Walsh. Yes, as President Trump and Secretary Wright 
reinforce, we're not going to force nuclear waste on Nevada.
    Senator Cortez Masto. Thank you.
    Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    The Chairman. Thanks.
    Senator Cantwell.
    Senator Cantwell. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I congratulate 
all the nominees.
    Thank you, Mr. Walsh. My line is a little more detailed on 
this question about commitments to the Hanford cleanup mission, 
and that is one of the key responsibilities you will have. This 
means over the next 15 years removing and treating 56 million 
gallons of nuclear waste. So hardly something that I would call 
an ongoing thing that people, you know, certainly the State of 
Washington has a consent decree with the DOE because we want to 
see it cleaned up, not because we want it to continue.
    Mr. Walsh. Yes.
    Senator Cantwell. And so, the notion that somebody would 
suggest that somehow we want this to continue, we have a 
mission and we want to move on. And so, we are happy to move on 
from that, but we also can't do it on the cheap. And oftentimes 
people look at the budget and they are like, oh, let's do it on 
the cheap or, you know, when we had cleanup all around the 
United States, people came together and said, oh, let's always 
get that budget. But as Colorado and South Carolina and other 
places that were easy to clean up got done, then everybody all 
of a sudden said, well, maybe we can do this on the cheap in 
the Northwest. So you can't. You have got to get it done right, 
and we want to make sure that already leaking storage tanks get 
the priority that they deserve.
    So the major understanding here is the Tri-Party Agreement 
and consent decree milestones that basically say these are the 
milestones that need to be met in cleaning up 586 square miles 
of Cold War era nuclear contaminants. That is literally just 
what it takes. You have to make these investments and continue. 
So do you commit to upholding the Tri-Party Agreement and the 
consent decree milestones that are a part of this process?
    Mr. Walsh. Yes, thank you for that question, Senator 
Cantwell, and you know, I really look forward to getting out to 
Hanford, meeting you out there, and digging into this. It's a 
critically important mission. The people of Washington State, 
and indeed, all Americans deserve to live in a safe, clean 
environment. I know this has been an ongoing process----
    Senator Cantwell. Well, this is a federal responsibility, 
right?
    Mr. Walsh. It is.
    Senator Cantwell. So it's the Federal Government's 
responsibility. We just are a little more of a watchdog just 
because we are there.
    Mr. Walsh. Yes.
    Senator Cantwell. And we have to be.
    Mr. Walsh. And I am a man of action. I understand the 
consent agreement. I understand the Tri-Party Agreement. It has 
outlined the framework of the cleanup and responsibilities it 
has. It's a living document that has been modified a few times 
over the last 20 years. And you have my commitment that we are 
going to work together, and that it's going to be a priority in 
the Office of Environmental Management.
    Senator Cantwell. Well, what nuclear waste understanding 
and technical expertise would you bring to the situation?
    Mr. Walsh. Well, I can tell you that I am a quick learner. 
I have an engineering background. I am sort of an engineering 
geek. And like anything I have accomplished in my life, whether 
it was building a complex semiconductor plant, you rely on the 
experts. And I think what the Hanford site needs is really 
leadership and a good, solid plan that is well executed, and 
that is what I intend to bring.
    Senator Cantwell. Thank you. Thank you for that.
    Ms. Robertson, could you talk about the budget cuts to 
EERE?
    Ms. Robertson. Thank you, Senator, for the question.
    I am not in the Department, so it's very difficult for me 
to talk specifically about decisions that have been made in the 
Department at this time.
    Senator Cantwell. What do you think, I mean, we have 
projects that are already underway, and you are talking about 
significant cuts to things like the Battery500 Consortium. Do 
you believe in those kinds of activities?
    Ms. Robertson. I am not familiar with the Battery500 
Consortium.
    Senator Cantwell. Okay, so you are trying to get a job with 
this level of oversight on energy efficiency and renewable, and 
this is probably one of the labs in the nation's biggest effort 
on storage, bringing grid-scale storage, so.
    Ms. Robertson. Is this at PNNL?
    Senator Cantwell. Yes, yes.
    Ms. Robertson. Okay. I'm sorry, I didn't know that was what 
it was referring to. I am well aware of their activities in 
both grid--they have released a big report this week in both 
grids and battery innovation. My perspective on the budget, as 
an outsider and a civilian----
    Senator Cantwell. I am just asking you about this idea that 
we should be investing and trying to testbed to try to get to a 
higher level of battery technology--I mean battery mass--you 
know, grid-scale storage, whether you support that concept.
    Ms. Robertson. I support battery technology and innovation 
as a very important function of the Department of Energy, 
absolutely.
    Senator Cantwell. And funding things like that at the 
national lab?
    Ms. Robertson. Funding at the national labs, again, not 
being in the building, not understanding all of the demands on 
the budget, it's very difficult for me to speak about a 
specific program when I am not in a position to evaluate all of 
the demands on the Department.
    Senator Cantwell. Okay, thank you.
    Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    The Chairman. Thank you.
    Senator Barrasso.
    Senator Barrasso. Thanks so much, Mr. Chairman. 
Congratulations to all of you. I appreciate your time and 
willingness to serve.
    Mr. Erdos, thanks so much for visiting with me.
    You know, the previous administration sought to delay and 
deny efforts to expand coal mining. This had a profoundly 
destructive impact on Wyoming, on families, in our communities. 
I think it also had a significant impact, destructively, in 
terms of our energy security as a nation. If confirmed, how are 
you going to change the course of OSM?
    Mr. Erdos. Well, I think what we need to do is look at 
NEPA. So there was decision that came down from the Supreme 
Court recently in regards to NEPA, and I think it was very 
telling. From what I recall reading, the idea is to focus NEPA 
on the areas to be affected, not so much upstream/downstream, 
substantial deference to the reviewing agency, and I think that 
goes a long way in ensuring that those NEPA reviews are done 
timely, we get EISs approved and records of decision out 
quickly. So I think that is one thing we look at is NEPA. I 
think that is a big deal. I think program amendments is 
another. I spoke to that earlier. I think we have to look at 
that. There are probably 30 to 35 program amendments sitting at 
OSM right now. That has a significant effect on the states and 
how they do business. So we need to look at that too.
    Senator Barrasso. Well, and to your point, in terms of the 
decision by the U.S. Supreme Court, it was an 8-0 decision. I 
mean, we're not talking about something that was close at all. 
And Justice Kavanaugh wrote the report. NEPA is a procedural 
cross check, not a substantive roadblock. The goal, he said, of 
the law, is to ``inform agency decision-making, not paralyze 
it.'' So I am very glad that you pointed out the Supreme Court 
ruling, and it is going to help influence your ability to get 
things done effectively and quickly.
    You know, one of the successes of that office that you are 
going to be holding, hopefully after your confirmation, depends 
on strong relationships with the states that execute things 
like the mine programs, both for mine development and for 
cleanup. States need clear guidance and an open line of 
communication to carry out these shared goals. So, if 
confirmed, how will you approach strengthening the cooperation 
between the Federal Government and the states?
    Mr. Erdos. We will do exactly what we did under the first 
Trump administration, Senator. I had scheduled meetings with 
the state folks. I scheduled meetings with the Interstate 
Mining Compact Commission, who represent most, if not all, of 
the states that have primacy across the country that actually 
mine coal. So you have to communicate with the states. If 
you're not communicating, if you not talking, you're not moving 
forward. If you're not talking, you are going backward. So it's 
all about communication. I represented Ohio for a decade on the 
IMCC--Interstate Mining Compact Commission--so I have many 
relationships across the country with all the state regulators. 
So we will continue to do that. That will serve us well.
    Senator Barrasso. Ms. Robertson, the Energy Efficiency and 
Renewable Energy Office is in charge of investing in innovative 
ideas and the way to give you the best chance of success with 
all of those. So how do we ensure that our limited funding is 
spent on the highest priority work?
    Ms. Robertson. Thank you for the question, Senator 
Barrasso.
    I think the President's priorities have been to create 
reliable, affordable, secure energy, and through that lens, we 
must make decisions regarding allocation of funds to ensure 
that the American taxpayer dollars are invested in the 
programs, projects, and advancements that will create the most 
meaningful impacts to the United States. And I think--I am not 
sure if that answers your question.
    Senator Barrasso. Yes, you know, because we have limited 
money and we want to make sure we get the best bang for the 
buck.
    Ms. Robertson. Absolutely.
    Senator Barrasso. Senator Cantwell just asked about a 
specific project, and I just thought, overall, I would give you 
an opportunity to talk about----
    Ms. Robertson. Thank you. And I do believe that there are 
11 offices within EERE, and the pioneering technologies that 
are happening in geothermal, in bioenergy, in water power--
there are a lot of exciting developments that don't violate the 
laws of nature or thermodynamics and have real potential.
    Senator Barrasso. Let me go to Mr. Eisner. Ms. Robertson 
just said ``that don't violate the laws'' and ``that have 
potential.'' So with your role, if confirmed, you are going to 
lead the office that oversees our participation in the 
International Energy Agency. In recent years, the IEA has 
changed its focus away from analyzing the world as it is, and 
has sought to project the world with its policy preferences in 
mind. If confirmed, how will you work with the IEA to get the 
agency back to providing unbiased analysis?
    Mr. Eisner. Thank you, Senator, for that very important 
question. I enjoyed serving as a keynote speaker at the Rockies 
Petroleum Conference with you last year in Laramie, Wyoming. I 
think that the key to effective advocacy and effective 
diplomacy really is leadership and good data, and I very much 
look forward to--having had much experience in my career 
working with heads of state, government ministers, and 
diplomats--I feel like I can be a very effective advocate of 
the U.S. position and the President's energy agenda in all of 
the bilateral and multilateral forums that I will have the 
honor, if I am confirmed, to participate in.
    Senator Barrasso. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    The Chairman. Senator Daines.
    Senator Daines. Chairman Lee, thank you. Congratulations to 
the nominees for considering these important roles. I also want 
to invite each of you to come visit Montana. The rest of the 
world is coming to see us, you might as well join the rest of 
the world and enjoy the great outdoors we have there in our 
great state.
    Mr. Erdos, in 2020, you were reported out of this Committee 
unanimously and similarly confirmed by the Senate by voice 
vote, and it's our aspiration and goal that we can do it again 
this time around. Unfortunately, under the Biden 
administration, the Office of Surface Mining refused to grant 
permits for three Montana coal mines. Thankfully, the Trump 
administration has reversed course and has now approved the 
Bull Mountains mine permit and the Spring Creek mine permit, 
and we expect to have a permit for the Rosebud coal mine very 
soon. Further, on the Fourth of July, President Trump signed 
the One Big Beautiful Bill into law to specifically authorize 
coal mining at the Bull Mountains mine. I want to thank the 
Chairman of the Committee for fighting for that important 
outcome and win in that piece of legislation. This was a big 
win for a lot of hardworking folks in Montana and for these 
rural Montana communities that don't have the elaborate 
lifestyle that you see on the show Yellowstone. More of Montana 
is struggling day in and day out to pay the bills every month.
    Mr. Erdos, when confirmed, will you prioritize reviewing 
and completing mining permits and implementing the new coal 
provisions signed into law in the Big Beautiful Bill?
    Mr. Erdos. Yes, certainly, Senator, and thank you for the 
question. You and I actually talked about those permits a few 
years ago, and obviously, OSM and BLM have got those through 
the system relative to NEPA reviews and finalized those, so 
that's great. Certainly, yes, I think provisions in the Big 
Beautiful Bill, there are some in there--the leasing part is 
not OSM, that's BLM, so we don't lease coal, but BLM does, but 
as far as the other provisions, royalties--that's a big deal--
12-and-a-half to 7 percent. So you have a coal operator out 
there that looks at 20 million tons of coal, and at 12-and-a-
half percent, the numbers don't work. But he looks at it at 7 
percent, and the numbers do work. So you mine that 20 million 
tons of coal at 7 percent, you have those revenues coming back 
into the country. So at 12-and-a-half, you get zero revenue. 
And at seven percent, whatever that number is, you have coming 
into the country.
    So I am excited about that. I think it will actually 
incentivize the industry to buy more coal and provide more 
revenue for the country.
    Senator Daines. Right, well the revenue piece is so 
important, but I will tell you, we need more baseload power. We 
need more energy. I mean, this is----
    Mr. Erdos. Absolutely.
    Senator Daines. This is an existential threat to the future 
in terms of our competitiveness and so forth as we think about 
where we are headed here in the next several years.
    By the way, Mr. Erdos, Montana recently passed House bill 
587 to update our mine reclamation laws. It's my understanding 
that the Office of Surface Mining now needs to approve those 
updates, and that mines in Montana need that approval 
immediately. Will you ensure that these approvals aren't held 
up by bureaucracy and are issued without delay?
    Mr. Erdos. Absolutely, yes. I spoke to this earlier in 
regard to program amendments. It's an issue. I understand it's 
an issue at OSM. We will work on that right away and make sure 
that those move through the system as they should.
    Senator Daines. Thank you.
    Mr. Erdos. So the short answer is yes.
    Senator Daines. Appreciate that.
    Mr. Eisner, as Assistant Secretary for International 
Affairs, your role will be to advocate for U.S. energy 
dominance around the globe. We have a very important mine in 
Montana called the Stillwater Mine. It's one of the only 
primary producers of platinum and palladium in the United 
States--in fact, it is the only--just on a very short list of a 
few around the world that do such. We have already lost 
hundreds of jobs because of Russian dumping. We must reverse 
this course.
    Mr. Eisner, when confirmed, will you advocate for the 
Stillwater Mines and their employees--some 700 employees were 
laid off recently--and work with your colleagues throughout the 
administration to take action against unfair Russian trade 
practices?
    Mr. Eisner. Thank you for that question, Senator Daines.
    I feel like one of my primary responsibilities as the 
Assistant Secretary for International Affairs will be to 
advocate for American energy and American critical minerals, 
both in bilateral as well as multilateral organizations, and I 
don't know the specifics about Stillwater or what the 
priorities of the Department and Secretary Wright are at this 
point, but I will always defend and advocate for America's 
product, and I will always advocate against unfair trade 
practices, should they exist with the Russians or with anyone 
else.
    Senator Daines. Mr. Eisner, thank you.
    One final follow-up question, and I am out of time. I want 
to bring up the--this is getting into the weeds here in 
Montana--it's just probably one you can take notes on and 
follow up, but it's the Montana Alberta Tie Line. It is a vital 
interconnector that allows for energy exports into the Canadian 
marketplace. Unfortunately, Alberta has levied a number of 
rules and regulations that discriminate against Montana 
electricity producers and ultimately undermines the stability 
of our grid. As you know, managing a grid is very, very dynamic 
and very important. You have maximum flexibility. This is a 
problem.
    When confirmed, would you commit to working with the 
relevant agency partners to ensure that our Montana energy 
producers operate on a level playing field in the Canadian 
markets?
    Mr. Eisner. Senator, as you know, a centerpiece of the 
President's economic agenda is the creation of a level playing 
field for U.S. exports around the world. And so, I have no 
doubt that a situation as you have described would be something 
that I would be eager to take a look at very early on in my 
tenure, should I be confirmed by the Senate.
    Senator Daines. Mr. Eisner, thank you.
    Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    The Chairman. Senator Heinrich.
    Senator Heinrich. We had a little bit of a discussion 
around incandescent and solid-state lighting earlier. So I 
thought I would take the opportunity to give some credit where 
credit is due. Our national labs are the envy of the world, and 
Sandia National Lab, in particular, played a key role in the 
creation of solid-state lighting. So I pulled up some numbers 
off the internet from the Department of Energy and some other 
think tanks that have analyzed the benefits of that, and I 
thought it was interesting that the cost to run a LED light 
bulb for 1,000 hours is $1.32, and the cost to run an 
incandescent light bulb for the same amount of hours is $6.60. 
So there is actually an 80 percent savings over that first 
thousand hours.
    The other interesting statistic that I was able to pull up 
is that most incandescent light bulbs burn out after 1,000 
hours. I can tell you, with my old pick-up truck, this happens 
to the brake lights all the time. It's a pain in the something. 
And so, when you replace that incandescent with a LED, you 
actually get 25 times the life, and we have our national labs 
to thank for that.
    Mr. Erdos, I wanted to ask you a particular tribal 
question. The Office of Surface Mining is responsible for 
permitting oversight for all coal mines on tribal lands, and 
that includes four sites right now on the Navajo Nation. So 
when we are talking about operations on tribal land, 
consultation is a legal requirement. It's not, in my view, 
adequate. So I wanted to ask you, if confirmed, would you not 
just engage in consultation, but really engage in active 
collaboration with the Navajo Nation and Navajo communities 
when making decisions about mine operations and reclamations on 
Navajo Nation land?
    Mr. Erdos. Yes, absolutely, Senator. I am certainly 
committed to doing that. As I said before, earlier, if you 
aren't communicating, you're not moving forward. So I look 
forward to doing that, actually.
    Senator Heinrich. Do you have some experience working with 
tribal governments?
    Mr. Erdos. I did back when I was here the previous time, 
yes.
    Senator Heinrich. Great. I look forward to engaging with 
you on that as well. I think it's really important for your 
success as well as for those communities.
    Ms. Robertson, I wanted to ask you about something that has 
been raised to me, and I wanted to give you a chance to speak 
to it, that Franklin has had a number of both Clean Air Act 
violations and spills in the State of New Mexico, several dozen 
spills, in fact. And what would you just say to my constituents 
that are concerned about that record in the Permian?
    Ms. Robertson. Senator Heinrich, happy to speak to that. 
Franklin Mountain Energy is now sold. But we built this company 
from a few barrels a day to over 65,000 barrels of day of oil 
production. Growing an organization from raw BLM leases in 
Southeast New Mexico to running five rigs at one time is a 
massive, 24/7 manufacturing operation for which our team has an 
outstanding safety record and an outstanding EPA air quality 
record. We did have a number of violations that were cited. The 
vast majority of those were remedied within a day or two. The 
majority of those issues came from third-party equipment that 
was on our facilities.
    We take great pride in both building and operating some of 
the most remarkable oil and gas facilities in the United States 
and in the great State of New Mexico. So I guess having spills 
is part of running a big, complicated business. There is not an 
oil and gas company that can move the amount of fluid, gas, and 
people that we do without having an occasional spill, but our 
record within the community is outstanding and I am very proud 
of them.
    Senator Heinrich. I appreciate your response to that. I 
think that while these impacts are a reality, they also have 
very real impacts on my constituents. And so, I think the goal, 
as challenging as it is, should be zero. But I appreciate your 
focus on that and your response to those questions.
    Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    The Chairman. Thank you very much.
    I want to thank the witnesses for their testimony and I 
want to thank all the Senators for their cooperation this 
morning.
    Questions for the record of this hearing will be due by 
6:00 p.m. tomorrow, Thursday, the 10th of July.
    The record of the hearing will remain open for statements 
until 6:00 p.m. on Wednesday, July 16.
    Thanks to the members of the Committee and the staff for 
getting this put together.
    On behalf of the Committee, I am pleased to congratulate 
each and every one of you on your nomination. I look forward to 
working closely with each of you and helping to get your 
nominations advanced to the floor. I hope every member of the 
Committee is willing to work with me to encourage leadership on 
both sides of the aisle to bring these nominations to the floor 
as soon as possible.
    Today's hearing is adjourned.
    [Whereupon, at 11:24 a.m., the hearing was adjourned.]

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