We have engaged the Enemy and we are losing to us

Today is when Kerry-Lieberman announce the American Power Act and Climate Progress has begun the ballyhoo. CP commentator Jim Edelson quickly nails a treatise to this particular door of the Church of the Internetz.

Congress is proposing to throw out a tool we know works on controlling pollution, the Clean Air Act, for a tenuous collection of subsidies for uneconomical nuclear and technologically non-existent green coal, collared credit prices with an unlimited safety valve, a demonstrably failed set of agricultural offsets, and 2020 targets that represent only marginal improvement over business as usual.

On the other hand, there are real values to this bill – a target we can take to international negotiations, border adjustments, and some regulatory infrastructure that has the potential for really addressing the problem some day. But again, the infrastructure could just as easily be weakened.

On the whole, this is a marginally useful bill that doesn’t do great damage, except for one provision.

If there is one thing that needs to be stripped from this bill in order to start closing coal plants and to send real signals to industrial facilities, it is that we don’t throw away the Clean Air Act. If the CAA isn’t gutted, we can afford to take the chance on the scheme coming out of this Congress. But we cannot afford to throw away the tool we know that works.

And take not my word, but take Katie McGintie’s* on this:

Beethoven
They say Justice is Blind, but Beethoven was deaf, which probably helps with ignoring the cries from the Gulf.

“Climate change and energy are in the news as the U.S. Senate, with much political drama, gears up to consider major legislation. In the House passed version and in the Senate draft, many interests – manufacturers, farmers, utilities, and oil and gas companies – were successful in winning desired concessions. Some ‘asks’ by industry are purely economic, part of the usual legislative give-and-take. Others go to core aspects of environmental law and policy. These requests go too far and should be rejected.

The Clean Air Act has served the country well. First passed in 1970 and signed into law by President Richard Nixon, the Act is testimony to a concern for healthy air shared by Republicans and Democrats alike. In the four decades since, the Act has cleaned up smokestacks, slashed smog and soot, cut acid rain, toxics and hazardous air pollution, held down pollution from cars, trucks and buses, and helped heal the ozone layer. All the while, the Act has supported economic growth in America, both directly as technologies are invented and businesses built to solve pollution problems, and indirectly as Americans live healthier, more productive lives.

Yet, the pending climate bills would strip away key provisions of the Clean Air Act: the EPA is prohibited from ordering greenhouse gas cuts beyond those in the bill. The states too are sidelined at least out until 2017. And a key authority exercised by California to clean up cars is in the balance.

These provisions should be dropped.

Time and again, the Clean Air Act has come to the rescue, moving in lock step with science. Take sooty pollution, for example. The EPA has acted to tighten standards when medical science demonstrated that lung disease and even death were being caused by smaller pollution particles.

Businesses say they are concerned about conflicting standards. That’s easily resolved by directing the EPA to use only those tools specified by Congress for cutting climate pollution. The Clean Air Act is set up perfectly to work with this kind of directive. Already under the Act, certain kinds of pollutants are identified to be regulated through market mechanisms like trading, while others are handled through technology mandates. The EPA is authorized, and in most instances required, under the Act, regularly to review the standards and update them. In this way the EPA tightens standards to keep pace with science, but the more rigorous standard is a follow on to, not in conflict with, earlier directives.

Keep in mind, too, EPA doesn’t have unlimited authority under the Clean Air Act. Once the science defines the problem, costs and technical feasibility are central to deciding the solution.

Over the last decade, the states have led the way in devising and implementing strategies to cut greenhouse gases. Their initiatives have worked well in containing pollution and raising revenues to support new clean energy projects that have grown local economies. In the climate bills, these efforts are stopped by Congress. They should not be. Even in these bills, Congress recognizes that state and federal action can co-exist.

Case in point: New federal requirements for the use of renewable energy are called for in the climate legislation — as a complement to state action, not a replacement. The states are not preempted on renewables and should not be on climate either.

Some Senators also want to strip California of its authority under the Clean Air Act to order cuts in climate pollution caused by cars. This threatens a proven and vital instrument of environmental progress. Vehicle by vehicle, the auto fleet today is remarkably cleaner than ever before. Advances in electric and alternate fuel technology promise even more gains. But the truth is that California has always pushed the progress toward a cleaner fleet.

The feds have followed. Climate pollution proves the point: the federal government is acting only now, trailing California by nearly a decade. Bottom line: cars would be dirtier and more inefficient today without California’s leadership, and that’s what we are in store for in the future if these provisions succeed.

It is important to remember that the pending climate bills represent only a very modest step forward in taking on the climate problem. At 17 percent by 2020, the emission reductions are small compared to the cuts called for by scientists to stabilize the climate, and even then, the generous opportunity provided in the bills to count forest and farmland conservation against pollution reduction requirements means that pollution may be offset rather than actually cut.

Attempting these far reaching rollbacks of long-standing and proven environmental policy is a particularly bad idea in the context of climate change. We know climate change presents greater challenges than any environmental problem confronted to date, imperiling the nation’s security and economy as well as public health.

To meet this challenge we should be acting now to reinforce and extend environmental policy tools, not take them away.”

* Note: Kathleen McGinty was Chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality 1993-1998 and Secretary of the PA Dept of Environmental Protection 2003-2008

Well gonna write a little law
Gonna mail it to my little E.P.A.
It’s rockin’ for the record
I want more lobbyists to pay
Roll over Rachel Carson
You gonna hear it again, and again, and again, today

with apologies to Chuck Berry

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5 Comments

  1. jcwinnie
    Posted 2010-5-12 at 4:33 pm | Permalink

    O.K. for the moment, it looks as if Edelson is incorrect. Senator Kerry says that the American Power Act “strengthens the Clean Air Act by expanding the authority of the EPA and making that authority permanent.”

  2. jcwinnie
    Posted 2010-5-12 at 6:04 pm | Permalink

    The just announced, proposed American Power Act fosters more off-shore drilling, part of the political compromises to achieve some insufficient, albeit legally approved, caps on emissions. After watching aerial footage of the Gulf after the BP oil spill all I can say, sister, is God Bless ‘Em

  3. jcwinnie
    Posted 2010-5-13 at 9:58 am | Permalink

    According to a new Associated Press-GfK Poll, the Gulf of Mexico oil spill hasn’t dimmed the public’s desire for offshore energy drilling.

    The telephone poll of 1,002 adults for the latest survey was conducted for The Associated Press by GfK Roper Public Affairs & Media between May 7-11. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.3 percentage points.

    Animal Farm
    The Deepwater Horizon Disaster illustrates the arrogance of world’s most powerful industry. Antonia Juhasz argues that “the business and politics of oil’s production pose such grave implications on so many fronts — the environment, human rights, the economy, worker safety, public health — that the current state of petroleum-industry affairs is fundamentally antithetical to democracy.”

    Associated Press Polling Director Trevor Tompson, AP News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius and AP writer Christine Simmons contributed to this report. They want You to know, Yes, You Virginia, that the poll found the public still supports the idea of drilling offshore for oil and gas.

    By 50 percent to 38 percent, more people favor increased coastal drilling for oil and gas than oppose it.

    While Republicans favor it by a 3-to-1 margin, Democrats lean toward opposing it, 52 percent to 36 percent. Independents are about evenly split. Groups giving drilling the strongest support include men, middle-aged and older people, whites and residents of rural and suburban areas.

    The country is split about evenly over which priority is more important in considering drilling, with 49 percent choosing the need for the U.S. to provide its own energy and 47 percent picking protection of the environment.

    Democrats prefer environmental protection by 62 percent to 35 percent. Republicans lean the other way, favoring the need for U.S. energy independence by 68 percent to 28 percent. Independents are about evenly split.

    “We need to drill here, our economy needs it, but we also need to save the environment,” said Ryan Hart, 42, of Auburn, Maine, who considers himself politically independent.

    Before the April 20 rig accident that triggered the spill, efforts to increase drilling offshore – which had used the slogan “drill, baby, drill” – had a major victory when the Democratic president partly lifted bans on drilling off many coastal areas. A Pew Research Center poll in April 2009 found that by 68 percent to 27 percent, people favored “more offshore oil and gas drilling in U.S. waters.” That polling did not have the same questions as this one.

  4. jcwinnie
    Posted 2010-5-13 at 3:22 pm | Permalink

    The American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity took the opportunity at announcement of the Kerry-Lieberman bill to praise “coal’s importance to our nation’s present and future.”

  5. jcwinnie
    Posted 2010-6-16 at 12:53 pm | Permalink

    CP commentator Anne tells us, “This is the comment I posted on the White House site for submitting questions before the [1st Oval Office, 15-Jun-2010] speech:”

    Please explain why you are about to squander your only chance to address the “predominant moral issue of the 21st century” by pushing a strong bill that raises preparedness for climate change, defunds fossil fuels & supports and funds clean energy.

    She then predicts, “We’ll end up with an energy bill that is essentially another corporate give-away with no Carbon cap, no adaptation/preparedness measures, no aggressive incentives to cut down on oil and coal, and big chunks of money to nukes and ‘clean coal’.”

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