(Update) Iowa Senate may debate a pipeline-related bill
April 2nd, 2025 by Ric Hanson
(Radio Iowa) – A Senate committee has overhauled a wide-ranging bill that key House members said would — in their words — “clean up the mess” the Iowa Utilities Commission created by granting a pipeline permit to Summit Carbon Solutions. Republican Senator Mike Bousselot of Ankeny has proposed a 34-page alternative and it got support from the other Republicans on the Senate Commerce Committee.
“House legislation over the past few years has discriminated by project type, creating protected classes of landowners,” Bousselot said. “or it was simply intended to attack a particular project.” The bill is now eligible for debate in the full Senate, which has never considered any pipeline-related bill since Summit’s project was first proposed in 2022. This year’s original House bill would have set a 25 year limit on the operation of a carbon pipeline. Bousselot gets rid of that limitation and, instead, sets some standards for any type of pipeline, transmission line project or structures to generate power proposed since last year.
“I believe it is important that we pass legislation protecting all landowners, not just those impacted by a certain pipeline project by taking into account all potential future contingencies,” Bousselot said. Former Congressman Steve King of Kiron was at the Iowa Capitol yesterday (Wednesday), urging senators to stop Summit’s carbon capture project. “This is dangerous material. We don’t have regulations for it,” King said. “…People are at risk here.” Kim Junker, a Butler County farmer, expressed her frustration during a Senate subcommittee hearing.
“My husband and I are registered Republicans and frankly I’m sick and tired of the games the Republicans have been playing with our lives, our livelihoods, our business, our property and our legacy,” she said. “You guys work for us, your constituents, not just your big donors.”
Bousselot’s plan says the Iowa Utilities Commission would have to decide within a year if a project qualifies for eminent domain.

