Congress to Scrutinize EPA Calif. Decision - Pelosi
US: December 24, 2007
WASHINGTON - The US Congress will closely examine the Environmental
Protection Agency's decision to deny California's request to regulate carbon
dioxide emissions from vehicles, the Speaker of the US House of
Representatives said Friday.
The EPA on Wednesday denied California's attempt to place first-ever US
limits on automobile emissions of heat-trapping gases, which account for
about 30 percent of the US total.
The decision, lauded by the auto industry and pilloried by environmental
groups, also stymies 16 other US states' attempts to enact similar rules.
"Your decision will be challenged immediately in the courts and will be
carefully scrutinized by the Congress as well," Nancy Pelosi, a California
Democrat, wrote to EPA administrator Stephen Johnson.
California said it will quickly appeal the decision.
"Administrator Johnson stands behind his decision," an EPA spokeswoman said.
"Greenhouse gas emissions are global in nature and California is not
exclusive in facing this challenge."
The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, chaired by Rep. Henry
Waxman, California Democrat, this week opened a panel probe into the
agency's decision and told the EPA to preserve all papers and documents in
the case record.
"Your decision appears to have ignored the evidence before the agency and
the requirements of the Clean Air Act," Waxman wrote to Johnson, noting that
the decision went against agency staff recommendations to grant the waiver.
The EPA will cooperate with Waxman's investigation, the agency spokeswoman
said.
The EPA said an energy bill signed into law this week by President George W.
Bush means no further action is needed to cut carbon dioxide emissions from
vehicles.
The EPA, charged with making the decision, said the law to raise automobile
fuel standards by 40 percent by 2020 was a "better approach" than a
"patchwork" of state rules.
"I vigorously disagree with your rationale for that decision and I strongly
support the inquiry (by Waxman's committee) into your decision-making
process," Pelosi wrote.
California needed the EPA waiver to implement a law it passed this year to
force automakers to make vehicles that cut emissions 25 percent by the 2009
model year. (Reporting by Chris Baltimore, editing by Matthew Lewis)
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