Supreme Court Takes Up
What Could Be Key Ruling on Climate Change
June 27, 2006 — By H. Josef Hebert, Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Running for president,
George W. Bush said he was ready to regulate carbon dioxide. But in early
2001, shortly after taking office, he changed his mind.
It would be too expensive to force reductions of the leading heat-trapping
"greenhouse gas" that is at the heart of the debate over global warming,
the president said.
Now the Supreme Court may force the president to shift gears again -- or
it may support his argument that there are other, cheaper ways to address
climate change.
The court agreed Monday to take up a case brought by a dozen states to
require the Environmental Protection Agency to regulate carbon dioxide
released from the tailpipes of automobiles and other motor vehicles.
The ruling could be one of the court's most important ever involving the
environment, determining how the nation addresses global warming.
Spurred by states in a pollution battle with the Bush administration, the
court said it would decide whether the EPA is required under the federal
Clean Air Act to treat carbon dioxide from automobiles as a pollutant
harmful to public health.
Bush repeatedly has rejected calls by environmentalists and some lawmakers
in Congress to regulate carbon dioxide, favoring voluntary actions and
development of new technologies to curtail such emissions.
But a dozen states argued that carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping
chemicals from automobile tailpipes should be treated as unhealthy
pollutants. They filed a lawsuit in an effort to force the EPA to curtail
such emissions just as it does cancer-causing lead and chemicals that
produce smog and acid rain.
The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to take the case after a divided lower
court sided with the administration. Arguments will be late this year,
with a ruling by next June.
"This is going to be the first major statement by the Supreme Court on
climate change. ... This is the whole ball of wax," said David Bookbinder,
an attorney for the Sierra Club, one of a number of environmental groups
that joined the states in their appeal to the high court.
While the case doesn't specifically involve carbon releases from power
plants, environmentalists said a court decision declaring carbon dioxide a
harmful pollutant would make it hard for the agency to avoid action
involving power plants that account for 40 percent or the carbon dioxide
released into the air.
Cars and trucks account for about half that amount.
The EPA said in a statement that the agency "is confident in its decision"
not to regulate the chemical under the federal Clean Air Act and plans to
argue its case vigorously before the high court
Recently, Bush told reporters he views global warming as a serious problem
and has "a plan to be able to deal with greenhouse gases" short of
regulating their use. It includes developing new technologies for cleaner
burning coal, using alternative motor fuels such as ethanol as substitutes
for gasoline and expanding nuclear power to produce electricity.
Critics argue that carbon emissions have continued to increase -- though
the rate of increase has declined -- and only regulation of carbon dioxide
and other greenhouse gases will stem the amount going into the atmosphere.
"It is encouraging that the high court feels this case needs to be
reviewed," said Sen. Jim Jeffords, I-Vt., who has campaigned in Congress
to regulate carbon dioxide. "It is high time to stop relying on
technicalities and finger pointing to avoid action on climate change."
The states involved, which together account for more than a third of the
car market, say the Clean Air Act makes clear carbon dioxide is a
pollutant that should be regulated if it poses a danger to public health
and welfare. They argue it does so by causing a warming of the earth.
The administration maintains that unlike other chemicals that must be
controlled to ensure healthy air, carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels
is not a dangerous pollutant under the federal law. And, officials argue,
even if it is, the EPA has discretion over whether to regulate it,
considering the economic costs involved.
The agency should not be required to "embark on the extraordinarily
complex and scientifically uncertain task of addressing the global issue
of greenhouse gas emissions" when voluntary ways to address climate change
are available, the administration argued in its filing with the high
court.
While a federal appeals court sided with the administration, its ruling
was mixed.
One judge said the states and other plaintiffs had no standing because
they had not proven harm. A second judge said even if the law gave the EPA
authority to regulate carbon dioxide, the agency was not obligated to do
so. A third judge, in the minority, said the EPA was violating the law by
not regulating the chemical.
In their appeal, the states maintained the case "goes to the heart of the
EPA's statutory responsibilities to deal with the most pressing
environmental problem of our time" -- the threat of global warming.
Plaintiffs in the lawsuit were California, Connecticut, Illinois, Maine,
Massachusetts, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island,
Vermont and Washington. They were joined by a number of cities including
Baltimore, New York City and Washington D.C., the Pacific island of
America Samoa, the Union of Concerned Scientists, Greenpeace, and Friends
of the Earth.
The case is Massachusetts v. Environmental Protection Agency, 05-1120
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On the Net: EPA: http://www.epa.gov/globalwarming
Source: Associated Press