Obama
unveils climate change plan that goes around Congress
By Ben Geman
President Obama is launching fresh battles
over climate change with plans to curb emissions using executive powers that
sidestep Congress — including controversial rules to cut carbon pollution from
existing power plants. [WATCH VIDEO]
The wide-ranging plan,
which Obama will tout in a speech later Tuesday, also beefs up federal efforts
to help deploy low-carbon and renewable energy, and has programs to help harden
communities against climate-fueled extreme weather.
Internationally, it seeks to knock down trade barriers
to climate-friendly goods and services; enhance cooperation with India, China
and other big carbon emitters; and curb U.S. support for overseas coal plant
construction, among many other steps.
The plan is designed to get around
Congress, where major climate bills have no political traction. White House
spokesman Jay Carney said Monday that Obama’s executive approach “reflects
reality.”
But the plan, especially its controversial
Environmental Protection Agency power plant regulations, will
nonetheless face big hurdles on and off Capitol Hill.
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That’s especially true when it comes to far-reaching
rules to curb carbon from existing power plants, which account for around a
third of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, largely due to coal-plant emissions.
Tackling existing plants is a step the EPA
has previously said it would take, but now, for the first time, the agency has
open White House backing.
The EPA will propose the existing plant
standards by June of next year and finalize them a year later, an
administration official said.
White House officials also say the
administration will float a modified proposal for new plants later this year
amid delays in a draft rule unveiled in 2012.
One eventual option for opponents of the
rules would be the Congressional Review Act (CRA), a mid-1990s law that allows
Congress to nullify final agency regulations.
The rule has been used successfully just
once: to overturn a Clinton-era ergonomics rule.
Resolutions under the CRA are immune from
Senate filibuster, but it’s a blunt instrument, forcing lawmakers to vote on
whether they want to nullify pollution standards rather than just modify
regulations.
“I think a CRA challenge will be talked
about, but our track record on those has not been good. Hope does spring
eternal, and maybe the White House finally has disrespected enough coal-state
[Democratic] senators to force them to finally take action,” said Stephen
Brown, vice president for federal government affairs with the refining company
Tesoro Corp.
GOP leadership aides did not detail their
strategies Monday ahead of Obama’s speech, but in the past, Republicans have
sought to use riders on spending bills to thwart the EPA and other agencies.
Overall, one fossil fuel industry source
predicted “a lot of creativity” on Capitol Hill.
Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) signaled his
readiness for new fights last week when he told reporters that new power plant
regulations would be “absolutely crazy,” alleging it will cost jobs.
At the very least, Republicans will try
and turn the optics of the battle in their favor.
The House will vote later this week on
legislation that would open up far more offshore areas to oil and gas
drilling.
“While President Obama is preparing to
roll out a new ream of red tape that will make American energy more expensive
and destroy jobs, the House is moving forward with its all-of-the-above energy
agenda this week,” Boehner’s office said Monday.
Capitol Hill lawmakers will also get
dragged into the fight in other ways. The National Republican Senatorial
Committee (NRSC) is vowing to tether vulnerable 2014 Democrats to Obama’s plan.
An NRSC spokesman alleged over the weekend
that Obama’s plan will “effectively crush the economy in West Virginia,
Kentucky, Alaska, Arkansas, and Louisiana — not to mention plenty of other
states like Michigan.”
“Whether or not Mark Begich, Mark Pryor,
Mary Landrieu, Kay Hagan, Gary Peters or any candidates in these states support
the initiative is irrelevant — the fact is that their embrace of the Obama
agenda is hurting folks back in their home states,” said Brad Dayspring, the
GOP group’s communications director.
Other hurdles will confront administration
officials, too.
Regulations are certain to draw legal
challenges. And the slower-than-expected rise in global surface temperatures
over the last 10-15 years is giving climate skeptics openings to challenge the
need for new regulations, while creating puzzles for climate scientists studying
the slowdown.
But efforts to impose tougher curbs on
greenhouse gas emissions also have allies on and off Capitol Hill who can help
support Obama on the science and the politics.
“We don’t measure warming by whether
individual years are warmer than other individual years, but by whether or not
the overall decadal trend shows warming. The past decade was the warmest decade
on record. By that metric, global warming proceeds unabated,” said Michael
Mann, a climate scientist with Pennsylvania State University.
Environmentalists say they will work to
create traction and help fend off attacks on Obama’s plans.
“These are common-sense rules that will
help us leave a better world for our kids. We intend to be very active in
defending them against interest groups who think there should be no limits at
all on this kind of pollution from power plants,” said Elizabeth Thompson,
president of the Environmental Defense Action Fund.
The Obama administration, for its part, is
pledging an inclusive process on the controversial rules for existing plants
that will draw in states, industry and others.
An administration official pledged in a
briefing Monday that the rules would be flexible. “That process will involve a
very aggressive set of stakeholder conversations,” the official said.
A few other highlights of the sweeping
plan include up to $8 billion in Energy Department loan guarantees for advanced
fossil energy projects, such as coal plants that trap carbon; fuel economy
standards for heavy-duty trucks beyond model year 2018, when existing standards
run through; and continued Interior Department efforts to permit renewable
energy projects on federal lands.
The White House is also pledging to boost
existing Energy Department appliance efficiency efforts.
“The Administration is setting a new goal:
Efficiency standards for appliances and federal buildings set in the first and
second terms combined will reduce carbon pollution by at least 3 billion metric
tons cumulatively by 2030 — equivalent to nearly one-half of the carbon
pollution from the entire U.S. energy sector for one year,” a White House
summary states.
Two poster's comments:
If
things go south, I still want to be warm during the cold season.
Where
I live I have a decent coal seam that will make some heat for me and others. I
plan on using it, if I have to. What a pain, if I have to.
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