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Committee hears debate over new EITE reporting and assessment requirements under Climate Commitment Act

February 18, 2026 | Legislative Sessions, Washington


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Committee hears debate over new EITE reporting and assessment requirements under Climate Commitment Act
Engrossed Senate Bill 6,246 would change how Washington treats emissions‑intensive, trade‑exposed (EITE) facilities under the Climate Commitment Act by directing the Department of Ecology to propose a method for annually reducing no‑cost allowance allocations and by requiring EITEs to submit periodic assessments of decarbonization options.

Jacob Lipson, staff to the committee, told lawmakers the bill would require Ecology’s December 2026 report to include proposed methods for annual reductions in no‑cost allowances that limit leakage risk and remain consistent with state emission limits. The bill would also require EITEs to submit an assessment every four years, including, if practicable, unit‑level emissions data; the assessments must be reviewed and stamped by a licensed professional engineer. Ecology could assess penalties under the Climate Commitment Act for failures to comply with the new assessment requirements, Lipson said.

Senator Vandana Slatter, the bill’s prime sponsor, framed the measure as a planning tool for the post‑2035 period when the Climate Commitment Act’s declining cap will require a new approach to EITEs. Slatter said the goal is to balance keeping major industrial employers in state while providing a clear schedule and framework for deeper decarbonization; she flagged penalties, reporting alignment between Ecology and industry lists, and a leakage study as outstanding items for stakeholder work.

Environmental organizations that testified—including Washington Conservation Action, Climate Solutions and the Nature Conservancy—praised the bill’s intent to set a post‑2035 framework but criticized recent amendments. They urged restoring independent third‑party verification of reported emissions and called for more specificity in reporting requirements, warning that weaker language could encourage facilities to under‑examine reduction options or use reports to justify additional no‑cost allowances.

Industry witnesses—including representatives of Kaiser Aluminum, the Alliance for Western Energy Consumers and the Association of Washington Business—said the stakeholder process has produced improvements and described the proposal as a work in progress. They emphasized concerns about confidentiality, the economic feasibility of proposed measures, the cost of submetering, and the potential competitiveness impacts if reporting or penalties are structured improperly.

Joel Creswell of the Department of Ecology told the committee Ecology generally supports an approach to long‑term decarbonization for EITEs but warned that some language in recent amendments could create uncertainty about which requirements are mandatory and could make implementation more difficult. Committee staff provided a rough figure—about 10,000,000 metric tons per year—as the combined emissions from the roughly 40 facilities currently covered; environmental witnesses asked the committee to ensure reporting and verification are strong enough to inform legislative decisions about post‑2035 allowance allocations.

Lawmakers asked detailed questions about how the bill defines "technically and economically feasible" measures, which facilities qualify as EITEs, and how penalty timing would work. Witnesses said the assessment requirement is meant to produce information for policymaking rather than immediately change compliance pathways, but they acknowledged that wording and verification details will shape how useful the reports are.

The committee took testimony from multiple panels representing environmental groups, industry, labor and community‑based coalitions and did not take a vote. Sponsors and stakeholders said they expect continued negotiation on verification, penalties, leakage analysis and reporting specifics before any final action.

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