
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


As 2024 kicks off, energy and climate policy discussions loom large in Washington. With the added complexity of the November presidential elections in the U.S., it remains uncertain what will happen regarding the increasingly partisan issues of environmental regulation and green industrial policy.
The Biden administration plans to continue implementing the Inflation Reduction Act, but Republicans in Congress could take action to hinder further progress. And government agencies, like the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the Environmental Protection Agency, could be significantly impacted by the Supreme Court's ruling on a case that questions agencies' ability to enact regulations.
So, what can we expect to happen in the nation's capital on the energy and climate front this year? And where are the reporters who follow this beat going to focus their attention?
This week host Bill Loveless talks with journalists Jennifer Dlouhy and Justin Worland about what they're keeping an eye on this year, and how Democrats and Republicans might approach major energy policy issues.
Jennifer is an energy and environmental policy reporter at Bloomberg News. Before joining Bloomberg in 2015, she was the Washington correspondent for the Houston Chronicle where she covered energy and environmental policy with a special focus on oil and gas.
Justin is a senior correspondent at TIME, where he covers climate change and the intersection of policy, politics, and society. In 2022, he received Covering Climate Now's inaugural Climate Journalist of the Year Award.
By Columbia University4.8
394394 ratings
As 2024 kicks off, energy and climate policy discussions loom large in Washington. With the added complexity of the November presidential elections in the U.S., it remains uncertain what will happen regarding the increasingly partisan issues of environmental regulation and green industrial policy.
The Biden administration plans to continue implementing the Inflation Reduction Act, but Republicans in Congress could take action to hinder further progress. And government agencies, like the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the Environmental Protection Agency, could be significantly impacted by the Supreme Court's ruling on a case that questions agencies' ability to enact regulations.
So, what can we expect to happen in the nation's capital on the energy and climate front this year? And where are the reporters who follow this beat going to focus their attention?
This week host Bill Loveless talks with journalists Jennifer Dlouhy and Justin Worland about what they're keeping an eye on this year, and how Democrats and Republicans might approach major energy policy issues.
Jennifer is an energy and environmental policy reporter at Bloomberg News. Before joining Bloomberg in 2015, she was the Washington correspondent for the Houston Chronicle where she covered energy and environmental policy with a special focus on oil and gas.
Justin is a senior correspondent at TIME, where he covers climate change and the intersection of policy, politics, and society. In 2022, he received Covering Climate Now's inaugural Climate Journalist of the Year Award.

1,993 Listeners

1,252 Listeners

571 Listeners

506 Listeners

837 Listeners

24 Listeners

132 Listeners

103 Listeners

141 Listeners

80 Listeners

638 Listeners

279 Listeners

230 Listeners

119 Listeners

141 Listeners