Clean Cloud Act of 2025
Sponsor

Full profile: /officials/C001068
Source: Congress.gov · FEC
Cosponsors (9)
Members who have signed on to support this bill since introduction. Source: Congress.gov.
- Daniel S. Goldman (D-NY-10)Original· 2025-11-20
- Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC)Original· 2025-11-20
- Kathy Castor (D-FL-14)Original· 2025-11-20
- Kelly Morrison (D-MN-3)Original· 2025-11-20
- Madeleine Dean (D-PA-4)Original· 2025-11-20
- Mike Quigley (D-IL-5)Original· 2025-11-20
- Pramila Jayapal (D-WA-7)Original· 2025-11-20
- Chellie Pingree (D-ME-1)· 2025-12-11
- Johnny Olszewski, Jr. (D-MD-2)· 2026-01-08
Latest Action
The most recent step in the bill's legislative path. Committee Activity below shows referrals and reports; the full action-by-action history including floor proceedings lives at Congress.gov →
Committee Activity
Currently in
- House Committee on Energy and CommerceReferred To · 2025-11-20
Previously
- Energy and Commerce CommitteeReferred To · 2025-11-20
Plain-English Summary
Clean Cloud Act of 2025 This bill establishes an emissions standard and fee system regarding the electricity used by data centers or cryptomining facilities that exceed a specified size. Additionally, the bill appropriates collected fees for various purposes, including to fund zero-carbon electricity generation, long-duration energy storage, and grants to lower residential electricity consumer costs. The bill requires the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Energy Information Administration to annually determine the greenhouse gas emission intensity of the total annual electricity consumed by (1) covered facilities from the electric grid, and (2) covered facilities from electricity generation assets located behind the power meter of the facilities. The EPA must determine and publish the greenhouse gas emissions intensities of the electric grid of each region to establish a baseline for the assessment of fees. Each calendar year from 2027 through 2034, the baseline for each region is reduced by 11% of the original baseline. For 2035 and after, the baseline is set to zero emissions. The EPA must assess a fee on (1) owners of any electric utility providing power to a covered facility that exceeds the baseline emissions in that region for that year, and (2) covered facilities with respect to the greenhouse gas emissions from electricity generation assets located behind the power meter of the facility above the baseline of the region for that year. The electric utilities may not recoup the cost of the fee by raising rates or assessing fees on customers that are not covered facilities.
Plain-English rewrite of the Congressional Research Service summary published on Congress.gov. Cached and reviewed.
Affected Industries
Industries and interest groups with a stake in how this bill is resolved. Compare with each member's outside-money backers on their finance page.
Why this matters: Look up any member who voted on this bill and check their finance page — do the industries listed above match the groups funding their campaigns? That's the kind of connection this tool is built to help you find.
Subjects
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