|
Go to Original
The Associated Press
Thursday 08 November 2007
State moves to force decision on whether it can impose greenhouse gas standards.
Sacramento,
California - California sued the federal government on Thursday to
force a decision about whether the state can impose the nation's first
greenhouse gas emission standards for cars and light trucks.
More
than a dozen other states are poised to follow California's lead if it
is granted the waiver from federal law, presenting a challenge to
automakers who would have to adapt to a patchwork of regulations.
"Our
position is that it's time for EPA to either act or get out of the
way," said Lee Moore, a spokesman for New Jersey Attorney General Anne
Milgram.
California's
lawsuit against the Environmental Protection Agency, filed in U.S.
District Court in Washington, D.C., was expected after Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger vowed last spring to take legal action.
At
issue is California's nearly two-year-old request for a waiver under
the federal Clean Air Act allowing it to implement a 2002 state
anti-pollution law regulating greenhouse gases.
Eleven other states have adopted California's standard as a way to combat global warming and five others are considering it.
"The
longer the delay in reducing these emissions, the more costly and
harmful will be the impact on California," the state attorney general's
office said in its 16-page complaint.
Schwarzenegger
and other state officials say implementing the law is crucial for
California's ability to meet the provisions of a separate global
warming law that passed last year, garnering worldwide attention. That
law seeks to reduce greenhouse gas emissions 25 percent by 2020.
Arizona,
Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New
Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont and
Washington plan to join California's lawsuit against the federal
government, said Gareth Lacy, spokesman for California Attorney General
Jerry Brown.
California
asked the EPA to grant its waiver in December 2005. EPA administrator
Stephen Johnson said last summer that he would make a decision by the
end of this year.
Schwarzenegger
sought quicker action and vowed to sue. The state's lawsuit was
expected to be filed in late October but was delayed after state
officials became preoccupied with the Southern California wildfires.
The EPA criticized the state's actions Thursday.
"The
administrator has stated numerous times that he plans to make a
decision by the end of the year," EPA spokeswoman Jennifer Wood said.
"It's unfortunate that California is more interested in getting a good
headline than allowing us to make a decision."
Yet
state officials say they need the matter resolved soon because the
auto-emissions law applies to vehicles in the 2009 model year, which
can be marketed by companies as early as this coming January.
Cars,
pickups and sport utility vehicles sold in California would be required
to produce fewer greenhouse gases, with the goal of reducing auto
emissions 25 percent by 2030.
Further delay by the EPA would interfere with the state's ability to enforce the law on time, according to the complaint.
"Congress
generally intended that the U.S. EPA make determinations of this type
in a matter of weeks or months, not years," the complaint says.
While
the federal government sets national air pollution rules, California
has unique status under the Clean Air Act to enact its own regulations
if it gets approval to do so by the EPA.
Other
states can follow federal rules or California's standards if they are
tougher. The EPA has granted about 50 such waivers over the past 40
years for the use of catalytic converters, leaded gasoline regulations
and other measures.
The
complaint filed Thursday claims the EPA failed to act in a reasonable
length of time on California's latest waiver request.
In
addition to the states that plan to join California's lawsuit, the
governors of Colorado, Florida and Utah have said their states plan to
adopt the standard.
The
EPA initially refused to act on California's application, saying the
agency did not have the authority to regulate greenhouse gases as a
pollutant. That changed when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in April that
the EPA did indeed have that right.
As
a result, the EPA is now developing greenhouse gas regulations that are
scheduled to be released by the end of the year. Environmental groups
say those regulations are unlikely to be stronger than California
standards.
Automakers continue to challenge the California standards in court.
They
are appealing a ruling last month by a federal judge in Vermont who
upheld the California rules in that state. They also are trying to
persuade a federal judge in Fresno to toss out the emission standards
mandated under California's 2002 law.
Associations
for both domestic and foreign car companies say California's standards
would raise the cost of vehicles and could force manufacturers to pull
some sport utility vehicles and pickup truck models from showrooms.
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. h o t g l o b e has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is h o t g l o b e endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
|