BILL ANALYSIS
HR6080
BEARISHCLEANER Act of 2025
HR6080 (CLEANER Act of 2025) carries an AI-assessed market impact score of 6/10 with a bearish outlook for investors. This legislation directly affects Exxon Mobil ($XOM), Chevron ($CVX), EOG Resources ($EOG) and Occidental Petroleum ($OXY) and 6 other tickers. The primary sectors impacted are Energy and Environmental Services. View the full bill text on Congress.gov.
6/10
Impact Score
bearish
Market Sentiment
10
Affected Stocks
2
Sectors Impacted
Key Takeaways for Investors
The CLEANER Act reclassifies oil, natural gas, and geothermal drilling wastes as hazardous, increasing regulatory burdens.
Energy exploration and production companies face higher operational costs, reducing profitability.
Hazardous waste management companies will experience increased demand and revenue.
The EPA has one year post-enactment to implement new regulations.
How HR6080 Affects the Market
This bill creates a bearish outlook for the Energy sector, specifically for exploration and production companies. $XOM, $CVX, $EOG, and $OXY will incur significant new compliance costs, negatively impacting their margins. Conversely, the Environmental Services sector, particularly hazardous waste management firms like $WM, $RSG, and $WCN, will experience a bullish catalyst due to increased service demand.
Bill Details
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Bill Number | HR6080 |
| Impact Score | 6/10AI Adjustment: AI detected additional qualitative factors (+2) · Sector Breadth: 2 sectors affected · Legislative Stage: Introduced · Cosponsor Momentum: 23 cosponsors — building momentum |
| Market Sentiment | bearish |
| Event Date | |
| Affected Sectors | Energy, Environmental Services |
| Affected Stocks | Exxon Mobil ($XOM), Chevron ($CVX), EOG Resources ($EOG), Occidental Petroleum ($OXY), Schlumberger ($SLB), Halliburton ($HAL), Baker Hughes ($BKR), $WM, $RSG, $WCN |
| Source | View on Congress.gov → |
Summary
The CLEANER Act of 2025 mandates the EPA to classify oil, natural gas, and geothermal drilling wastes as hazardous, increasing disposal costs and regulatory burdens for energy producers. This directly impacts the profitability of exploration and production companies and benefits hazardous waste management firms. The bill's referral to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce indicates a significant legislative step.