• New EPA
rules spur prospects for deal to end climate change
• Climate
groups welcome 'momentous development'
• Coal
lobbyists say plans will create new US energy crisis
theguardian.com,
Suzanne Goldenberg, US environment correspondent, Monday 2 June 2014
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The new rules represent the first time Obama has moved to regulate carbon pollution from power plants. Photograph: Matt Brown/AP |
The Obama
administration unveiled historic environment rules cutting carbon pollution
from power plants by 30% on Monday, spurring prospects for a global deal to end
climate change but setting up an epic battle over the environment in this
year's mid-term elections.
The new
rules, formally announced by the Environmental Protection Agency, represent the
first time Barack Obama, or any other president, has moved to regulate carbon
pollution from power plants – the largest single source of carbon dioxide
emissions that cause climate change.
The EPA
said the regulations, which would cut carbon pollution from power plants 30%
from 2005 levels by 2030, would “fight climate change while supplying America
with reliable and affordable power”.
The EPA
administrator, Gina McCarthy, said the new rules would be critical to Obama's
efforts to deliver on his promise – to Americans and the international
community – to fight climate change.
"The
EPA is delivering on a vital piece of President Obama's climate action plan by
proposing a clean power plan that will cut harmful carbon pollution from our
largest source – power plants," she said in a statement.
“This is
not just about disappearing polar bears and melting ice caps,” McCarthy said in
a speech at EPA headquarters. “This is about protecting our health and
protecting our homes. This is about protecting local economies and this is
about protecting jobs.”
The new
rules were not as ambitious as some environmental groups had hoped. America is
already a third of the way towards meeting the national average of a 30% cut in
emissions. Some states, especially those in the north-east, have already
exceeded the standard.
Even so,
reaction from environmental groups to the new power plant rules ranged from
“momentous” to “historic”. Al Gore said the new rules were “the most important
step taken to combat the climate crisis in our country's history”.
Michael
Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club, said "today, the president
made good on his promise to American families that his administration would tackle
the climate crisis, and clean up and modernize the way we power our
country."
In an
initiative organised by Ceres, the green investor network, 128 companies and 49
investors managing $800 billion in assets, sent letters to the White House and
leaders of both parties in Congress supporting the new rules as "a
critical step" to dealing with climate change.
But a lobby
group for the coal industry – which will be hit hardest by the new rules – said
the regulations would hurt the economy and lead to power outages. “If these
rules are allowed to go into effect, the administration, for all intents and
purposes, is creating America's next energy crisis,” the American Coalition for
Clean Coal Electricity said.
Obama had
initially sought to deal with climate change through Congress. But after that
effort collapsed, and with Republicans in Congress uniformly opposed to cutting
carbon emissions – or even acknowledging climate change was occurring – Obama
decided last year to use his executive authority to cut carbon pollution.
In her
announcement on Monday, McCarthy hit back at criticism from industry and
conservative groups that the rules will lead to power outages or higher
electricity prices. “Critics say that their energy bills will skyrocket. Well,
they're wrong,” she said.
McCarthy
said the new rules would result in pollution savings that amount to
"double what every power plant in America generated in the way of
pollution in 2012."
The result,
she said, would be lower medical bills and fewer trips to the emergency rooms,
especially for kids with asthma, the elderly and infirm.
McCarthy
says the plan "is also about environmental justice" because
"lower-income families and communities of color are hardest-hit."
Emissions
creeping up again
Power
plants are the largest single source of carbon pollution, accounting for nearly
40% of the emissions that cause climate change.
Obama, in
his weekly radio address on Saturday, said it was past time to set national
limits on carbon dioxide emissions – just as the EPA has done for years with
arsenic, mercury and other toxins.
“Right now,
there are no national limits to the amount of carbon pollution that existing
plants can pump into the air we breathe. None,” he said. “They can dump
unlimited amounts of carbon pollution into the air. It's not smart, it's not
safe, and it doesn't make sense.”
Carbon
dioxide emissions from power plants had been falling since 2005, because of the
economic downturn and because of the switch from coal to cheaper natural gas.
Ethan
Zindler of Bloomberg New Energy Finance said the power industry was already
about a third of the way towards the 30% goal.
But
emissions crept up last year and again in the first months of 2014, and the
regulations would put America on course for long term and lasting cuts to
carbon pollution.
Andrew
Steer, the chief executive of the World Resources Institute, said it was a
“momentous development” for America's efforts to deal with climate change.
“It's the
most important action available to cut US emissions – and the Obama administration
has seized the opportunity,” he said. “These new standards send a powerful
message around the world that it's time to face the global threat of climate
change.”
The rules
could affect 1,600 power plants. About 600 of these operate on coal, including
many that are nearly 50 years old and will have the most difficulty meeting the
new standards.
Under the
rule, states and power companies will have a range of options to meet the new
standards: switching from coal to cleaner-burning natural gas; forming
cap-and-trade markets; expanding renewables such as wind and solar power; or
encouraging customers to use less energy by moving to more efficient heating
and cooling systems and appliances.
That's a
departure for the EPA, which generally has focused on curbing emissions from
specific smoke stacks.
But the
Natural Resources Defense Council, which produced models that helped guide the
EPA, said a system-wide approach would make it easier and cheaper for power
companies to reach the new standard.
The 30%
national target will not be applied uniformly across the country. The EPA will
set individual reductions targets for each state, taking into account their
energy mix, according to those briefed on the plan.
States have
until 2016 to come up with a strategy for meeting the targets. However, the EPA
rules will not come into force in all states until 2020, according to one
individual briefed on the plan.
“They are
not going to spread it out smoothly all over the place like creamy peanut
butter,” said Vicki Arroyo, who heads the climate centre at the Georgetown
University law school. “It's going to be more lumpy than that. Some states will
have less ambitious targets, and some states will have more.”
The idea is
to take account of the available energy sources in each state, as well as the
measures some states have already undertaken to cut carbon pollution.
North-eastern states have already cut their power plant emissions by 40%
compared with 2005.
McCarthy
said Monday the plan is tailored for the states. "The glue that holds this
plan together ... is that each state's goal is tailored to their own
circumstances ... each state's different, so each goal, and each path, can be
different," she said.
Arroyo said
it was possible the rule could bring about the same level of reductions in
carbon pollution as a climate change bill that was defeated by Congress five
years ago.
The new EPA
rule bypasses Congress, relying on Obama's executive authority and supreme
court decisions, to propose new rules under the Clean Air Act.
The Chamber
of Commerce, the country's biggest business lobby, said last week the new rules
would cost the economy $51bn and put 224,000 people out of work.
Coal-mining
companies, some power companies and Republican state officials have accused the
EPA of overstepping its authority, and will be studying the bill closely for
possible legal challenges.
In their
rebuttal to Obama's radio address, the Republicans said the new standards would
"kill coal" and lead to power outages.
"We'll
all be paying a lot more money for electricity – if we can get it," said
Wyoming senator Mike Enzi.
But Obama
has been marshalling his own supporters. Environmental and public health groups
have been pushing hard for the new rules.
Researchers
from Harvard and Syracuse universities put out a study last week saying that
curbs on carbon pollution would also reduce smog and soot, avoiding premature
deaths from heart attacks and lung disease.
That
campaign effort is due to pick up again on Monday. Obama is scheduled to hold a
conference call with the American Lung Association and other public health
groups on Monday afternoon.
White House
officials spent Sunday briefing governors and business leaders about the new
rule.
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