Supreme Court Will
Hear Important Environment Case
June 26, 2006 — By Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court agreed
on Monday to consider whether the Bush administration must regulate carbon
dioxide to combat global warming, setting up what could be one of the
court's most important decisions on the environment.
The decision means the court will address whether the administration's
decision to rely on voluntary measures to combat climate change are legal
under federal clean air laws.
"This is the whole ball of wax. This will determine whether the
Environmental Protection Agency is to regulate greenhouse gases from cars
and whether EPA can regulate carbon dioxide from power plants," said David
Bookbinder, an attorney for the Sierra Club.
Bookbinder said if the court should uphold the administration's argument,
the decision also could jeopardize plans by California and 10 other
states, including most of the Northeast, to require reductions in carbon
dioxide emissions from motor vehicles.
There was no immediate comment from either the EPA or White House on the
court's action.
"Fundamentally, we don't think carbon dioxide is a pollutant, and so we
don't think these attempts are a good idea," said John Felmy, chief
economist of the American Petroleum Institute, a trade group representing
oil and gas producers.
The dozen states were joined by a number of cities and various
environmental groups in asking the court to take up the case after a
divided lower court ruled against them.
They argue that the Environmental Protection Agency is obligated to limit
carbon dioxide emissions from motor vehicles under the federal Clean Air
Act because as the primary "greenhouse" gas causing a warming of the
earth, carbon dioxide is a pollutant.
The administration maintains that carbon dioxide -- unlike other chemicals
that must be controlled to assure healthy air -- is not a pollutant under
the federal clean air law, and that even if it were the EPA has discretion
over whether to regulate it.
A federal appeals court sided with the administration in a sharply divided
ruling.
One judge said the EPA's refusal to regulate carbon dioxide was contrary
to the clean air law; another said that even if the Clean Air Act gave the
EPA authority over the heat-trapping chemical, the agency could choose not
to use that authority; a third judge ruled against the suit because, he
said, the plaintiffs had no standing because they hadn't proven harm.
Carbon dioxide, which is released by burning fossil fuels such as coal or
gasoline, is the leading so-called "greenhouse" gas because as it drifts
into the atmosphere it traps the earth's heat, much as a greenhouse traps
heat. Many scientists cite growing evidence that this pollution is warming
the earth to a point of beginning to change global climate.
At the heart of the climate debate is whether carbon dioxide releases
should be controlled by emission caps on power plants and requiring motor
vehicles to become more fuel efficient, therefore burning less fuel and
producing less carbon dioxide.
President George W. Bush, when first running for president, expressed
support for regulating carbon dioxide, but he reversed himself shortly
after getting into office -- saying he was convinced that voluntary plans
to curtail carbon were a better way to go and mandatory regulation would
be too expensive for business.
In 2003, the EPA's top lawyer concluded that the agency lacked the
authority to regulate carbon dioxide under the Clean Air Act, reversing a
legal opinion issued several years earlier by the Clinton administration
and prompting the lawsuit.
"If ever there was a case that warranted Supreme Court review this is it,"
says Massachusetts Attorney General Tom Reilly, whose state is one of 12
involved in the lawsuit.
In their appeal, the states argued that 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.
The administration countered that the EPA should not be required to
"embark on the extraordinarily complex and scientifically uncertain task
of addressing the global issue of greenhouse gas emissions" when other,
voluntary ways to address climate change are available.
In addition to Massachusetts, the states are California, Connecticut,
Illinois, Maine, 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.
Source: Associated Press