Senate Environment, Energy & Technology Committee advances 11 bills, sends most to next committees

Senate Environment, Energy & Technology Committee · February 3, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

In an executive session the committee considered 11 bills on data centers, AI, cultural‑resource protection, transmission authority, fuels and product safety; most received due‑pass recommendations and were sent to Ways and Means or Rules for further action.

The Senate Environment, Energy & Technology Committee held an executive session to consider 11 bills covering energy, technology, cultural‑resource protections and consumer safety and advanced most by voice vote.

Staff briefed each measure before members debated and took executive actions. Key items included a data‑center bill that removed a proposed 0.005 per kilowatt‑hour fee, a proposed substitute on artificial intelligence that clarified definitions and oversight roles, a cultural‑resource bill that would direct the Department of Archaeology and Historic Preservation to convene tribal and local stakeholders, amendments to establish a statewide electric transmission authority, and a pair of proposed substitutes on lead in cookware that resulted in one substitute failing and a second passing.

Votes were largely by voice. Where recorded, committee members moved to roll amendments into new proposed substitutes and to recommend bills as due passed and to send them to the appropriate next committee (commonly Ways and Means or Rules). Several substitutes were adopted; a few amendments to the transmission authority bill failed on voice votes after extended debate.

Quotes capturing the tenor of the session included an unnamed business representative urging rejection of a fee affecting data centers, saying, “Our competitiveness is the key to success,” and multiple senators urging continued work with stakeholders, particularly on cultural‑resource protections and transmission planning.

Votes at a glance SB 6,124 — Amendment adopted; new proposed substitute received due‑pass recommendation and was sent to Ways and Means (passed subject to signatures). SB 6,171 — Amendment C1 removing a 0.005/kWh fee adopted; proposed substitute received due‑pass recommendation and was sent to Ways and Means (passed subject to signatures). SB 6,284 — Proposed substitute D adopted; due‑pass recommendation to Ways and Means (passed subject to signatures). SB 5,609 — Proposed substitute considered; amendment not adopted; due‑pass recommendation (passed subject to signatures). SB 6,172 — Due‑pass recommendation (passed subject to signatures). SB 62 46 — Due‑pass recommendation (passed subject to signatures). SB 59 32 — Proposed substitute adopted; due‑pass recommendation to Ways and Means (passed subject to signatures). SB 62 69 — Proposed substitute adopted; due‑pass recommendation to Rules (passed subject to signatures). SB 6,223 — Due‑pass recommendation to Ways and Means (passed subject to signatures). SB 5,975 — Proposed substitute J failed; substitute K adopted and received due‑pass recommendation to Ways and Means (passed subject to signatures). SB 5,466 — Multiple amendments M1–M5 debated (most failed); proposed second substitute received due‑pass recommendation and was sent to Ways and Means (passed subject to signatures).

The committee adjourned after completing its executive actions; members were reminded to sign committee boards. Further committee and floor action will determine whether each bill becomes law.