Friday 17 April 2009
Obama administration move is aimed at prodding lawmakers to regulate.
Washington - Having received White House backing, the
Environmental Protection Agency declared Friday that carbon dioxide and
other greenhouse gases are a significant threat to human health and
thus will be listed as pollutants under the Clean Air Act - a policy
the Bush administration rejected.
"This finding confirms that greenhouse gas pollution is a
serious problem now and for future generations," EPA Administrator Lisa
Jackson said in a statement.
The move could allow the EPA to regulate greenhouse gases,
but it's more likely that the Obama administration will use the action
to prod Congress to pass regulations around a system to cap and then
trade emissions so that they are gradually lowered.
Indeed, the EPA emphasized that the congressional route was
preferred to EPA regulation. "Both President (Barack) Obama and
Administrator Jackson have repeatedly indicated their preference for
comprehensive legislation to address this issue and create the
framework for a clean energy economy," the EPA said in its statement.
The EPA last month sent its proposal to the White House
Office of Management and Budget, which reviewed and approved it. By
law, the decision includes a 60-day public comment period before being
finalized.
The EPA concluded that six greenhouse gases should be
considered pollutants under the 1970 Clean Air Act, which is already
used to curb emissions that cause acid rain, smog and soot.
Discussion to Begin on Regulation
But its declaration does not spell out how or what to
regulate. Instead, the EPA and lawmakers are expected to begin that
discussion.
Congress is considering imposing an economy-wide cap on
greenhouse gas emissions along with giving industry the ability to
trade emission allowances to mitigate costs. Legislation could be
considered by the House before the August congressional recess.
The chairman of the Senate Environment Committee, Sen.
Barbara Feinstein, D-Calif., urged the EPA to use the Clean Air Act to
start "cutting greenhouse gas emissions right now."
"However," she added, "the best and most flexible way to
deal with this serious problem is to enact a market based cap and trade
system, which will help us make the transition to clean energy and will
bring us innovation and strong economic growth."
Potential health impacts from warming, EPA scientists said in their recommendations, include:
• longer and more severe heat waves;
• increased smog in some areas;
• dangerous flooding caused by stronger storms;
• and diseases, including malaria and dengue fever, related to flooding and warmer weather.
Jackson on Friday said curbing greenhouse gases fits in with
Obama's call for "a low carbon economy" as well as lawmakers' actions
toward clean energy and climate legislation. "This pollution problem
has a solution," she said, "one that will create millions of green jobs
and end our country’s dependence on foreign oil."
Shift Started with Supreme Court
The Bush administration refused to regulate greenhouse gases
as a pollutant under the Clean Air Act, even though the U.S. Supreme
Court in 2007 prodded the federal government to do so.
In his first week in office, Obama directed the EPA to
review a decision by the Bush administration denying California and
other states the right to control auto emissions, which, along with
pollution from coal-fired power plants, are a major source of
greenhouse gases.
Environmentalists praised the EPA move, but urged the
administration to use the Clean Air Act until Congress comes up with a
plan.
The EPA should be required "to follow up with standards
under the Clean Air Act, the nation's most effective environmental law,
to curb carbon pollution from our cars, power plants and other
industrial sources," said David Doniger, climate policy director at the
Natural Resources Defense Council.
Frank O'Donnell, director of Clean Air Watch, said he
expected federal limits on "emissions from the biggest sources,
including power plants and motor vehicles."
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other industry lobbying groups oppose using the Clean Air Act to regulate emissions.
"It will require a huge cascade of (new clean air) permits"
and halt a wide array of projects, from building coal plants to highway
construction, including many at the heart of economic recovery plan,
Bill Kovacs, a vice president for environmental issues at the chamber,
said when the EPA's recommendations were made last month.
Other critics have noted that the Clean Air Act regulates
any stationary source - from a gas station to a power plant - that
emits more than 250 tons of a pollutant a year. That would place
thousands of smaller sources under onerous federal rules, those critics
say.
Supporters of stricter regulations say the Clean Air Act
could be revised to exempt smaller sources and focus on large ones like
power plants.
Nations Working on New Treaty
The United States is under pressure to take some action on
global warming in advance of negotiations on a new international treaty
in December.
The Obama administration has vowed to step up
participation, and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton even has a
climate envoy.
The Bush administration refused to participate in the
current treaty, the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, citing a lack of participation
by developing countries and harm to the U.S. economy. In the late
1990s, during the Clinton administration, the Senate balked at
ratifying the agreement.
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The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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