Whether the strategy will work is still unclear.
Calling the plan “the single most important step America has ever taken in the
fight against global climate change,” President Obama earlier this week released
details on the Clean Power Plan mandating that power plants cut greenhouse gas
emissions 32 percent by 2030 and calling on states to come up with their own,
individualized, emissions reduction targets, starting in 2022.
Considered the cornerstone of the Obama administration’s environmental policy,
the Clean Power Plan marks the first federal measure to regulate carbon dioxide
emissions from the nation’s existing power plants.
But elected officials in some states — particularly those with large deposits of
coal — are pushing back on a couple of different fronts: challenging the
legality of the EPA rule and encouraging states to simply not comply with the
plan by refusing to submit state implementation plans.
“Obama needs states to do his dirty work,” said Thomas Pyle, president of the
American Energy Alliance, an industry group fiercely opposed to the Clean Power
Plan.
“The more governors say no thank you, the more this is going to force EPA to do
things they don’t want to do,” said Charles Drevna, distinguished senior fellow
at the Institute for Energy Research, a nonprofit that calls for free-market
solutions to environmental challenges. “They don’t want to take responsibility.
They just want to tell states, hey, just go do it.”
If enough states refuse to turn in state implementation plans, the thinking
goes, the EPA will get so bogged down that the Clean Power Plan won’t go into
effect across the country until the president’s term is up in 18 months.
Drevna points to the problems the EPA had updating its own renewable fuel
standard. The 2014 numbers weren’t released until earlier this year.
“The last time I looked at the calendar it was 2015,” Drevna said in a telephone
interview. “So if EPA thinks it has enough wisdom and manpower to send a (Clean
Power Plan) for 50 states in the next year or so, you know what we say to them?
Have at it.”
Indiana’s Republican governor, Mike Pence, has threatened to not turn in a SIP,
saying the Clean Power Plan will decimate his state’s coal industry and cause
ratepayers’ bills to spike.
In a conference call with energy reporters last month, Pence accused the Obama
administration of using the Clean Power Plan to “address a climate agenda
through a regulatory state.”
Governors in Wisconsin, Texas, Louisiana, West Virginia and Oklahoma have
indicated they would do the same and state cabinet members and attorneys general
in states such as Michigan, Alabama, Mississippi and Wyoming expressed concerns
about the 1,560-page plan that landed on their capital doorsteps early this
week.
But there are political risks involved in the “No SIP” strategy.
If states do not submit individualized plans, then the EPA reserves the right to
come up with its own plan for holdouts that figures to have much stiffer
requirements.
That possibility led to officials in the administration of Republican Gov.
Susana Martinez of New Mexico to announce this week it would submit a SIP.
“There’s a lot of debate on the national level whether states should boycott the
rule and refuse to comply,” New Mexico Environment Department Secretary Ryan
Flynn told the Albuquerque Journal. “But we don’t believe that’s a smart
approach for our state, given the risks we’d face.”
The administration of New Mexico’s previous governor, Democrat Bill Richardson,
didn’t submit a state plan on federal rules concerning nitrogen oxide emissions
and the feds ended up mandating nearly $1 billion in a haze-reduction plan at
the state’s largest coal-fired power plant.
Related: States heading in different directions on EPA’s Clean Power Plan
“If you file (a SIP) now, you will cede any opportunity you had to fight this
thing,” Drevna told Watchdog.org. “You will, A) cede that EPA has the authority
to do it and B) that it’s the right thing to do. And our position is that is
absolutely neither of those.”
But Richard Revesz, director of the Institute for Policy Integrity at the New
York University School of Law, thinks states that don’t file SIPs are making a
mistake.
“The states will lose certain flexibility if they end up having a federal plan
imposed on them,” Revesz told Watchdog.org.”My guess is there will be states
that will challenge the legality of the Clean Power Plan but will nonetheless
prepare a state plan … because they will understand they are harming themselves
by not doing that.”
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The other angle of attack for critics is taking the EPA and the
Obama administration to court, saying the agency is overstepping its
authority and doing an end-run around Congress.
“They pick and choose which section of a particular law that they
think is applicable and then they disregard the other sections,”
Drevna said. “EPA does not have the legal authority to regulate how
electricity is generated in a state and they don’t have the legal
authority to regulate it on a statewide basis.”
But the EPA believes it’s on solid legal footing.
“The Clean Power Plan follows our clear legal authority under the
Clean Air Act,” EPA press secretary Melissa J. Harrison said in an
email to Watchdog.org just before Obama unveiled the plan’s details.
“The Supreme Court has decided multiple times that EPA has an
obligation to regulate greenhouse gases.”
Revesz, who supports the plan, is confident the EPA will win in
court.
“All EPA is doing with this rule is shifting from more
carbon-intensive forms of electricity production to less
carbon-intensive electricity production and that’s exactly its
responsibility,” Revesz said in a telephone interview.
S. William Becker, executive director of the National Association of
Clean Air Agencies, thinks the EPA helped itself by extending by two
years the amount of time states will have to meet the new targets.
“EPA has struck the right balance,” Becker told the Washington Post.
“The agency has strengthened its legal defense of the program
without sacrificing environmental integrity.”
A key question will be whether opponents can win an injunction or a
stay to suspend the Clean Power Plan until a decision is reached on
whether the EPA has the authority to impose the plan’s regulations
on states. That’s exactly what 16 states did Wednesday, calling on
the EPA to halt implementation of the Clean Power Plan until courts
rule on the plan’s legality.
“These regulations, if allowed to proceed, will do serious harm to
West Virginia and the U.S. economy, and that is why we are taking
quick action to bring this process to a halt,” said West Virginia
Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, a Republican.
The coalition of states has also promised to challenge the Clean
Power Plan in court.
A number of industry groups, including Murray Energy Corp., the
nation’s largest underground coal mining company, have also filed
suit.
“Their legal foundation is very, very shaky,” Morrisey said. “We are
confident that we will prevail.”
The recent legal record is a mixture of good news and bad news for
supporters as well as critics of the EPA.
The agency beat back a challenge led by Morrissey to turn back the
Clean Power Plan in June, when the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia ruled the case could not go forward because the
rule had not been finalized.
However, the EPA lost a U.S. Supreme Court decision six weeks ago.
In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court ruled EPA’s regulation to limit
emissions of mercury and other toxic pollutants from coal-fired
power plants went too far by not taking the costs of regulation into
effect when the agency made its initial determination.
The costs of the Clean Power Plan vary, according to which groups
you talk to.
EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy says for every $1 spent on the
cleaner standards, the public will see $7 in health benefits,
although the Obama administration estimated the new rule will cost
$8.4 billion a year by 2030.
Industry claims the costs will be higher than that, with one group
releasing a study alleging 43 states will see their electricity
prices increase by double digits in the next decade.
“This is a federal,Washington D.C., government takeover of energy
and electricity in every state,” Drevna said. “It’s a tax and it’s
going to ration our energy.”
“I think (climate change) is a very serious problem that needs to be
addressed,” Revesz said. “We can’t continue ignoring it. And I think
our leadership at this point will make a difference in making other
countries move forward as well and I think that’s a significant
value of the Clean Power Plan.”
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