Coalition Urges Congress to Bar EPA Regulation of
Greenhouse Gas Emissions
WASHINGTON, June 9, 2010 /PRNewswire
A group of 24 trade associations representing a broad range of employers
that provide jobs to millions of Americans is urging U.S. senators to
bar the Environmental Protection Agency from going around Congress to
regulate greenhouse gas emissions under the Clean Air Act.
The group has sent a letter to all senators urging them to support
Senate Joint Resolution 26, a bipartisan measure introduced by Sen. Lisa
Murkowski (R-Alaska).
The resolution would overturn EPA's 2009 "endangerment" finding, which
concluded that greenhouse gas emissions endanger public health and
welfare. The finding paved the way for EPA to regulate car and
light-duty truck emissions of greenhouse gases, which in turn has
triggered subsequent EPA regulation of greenhouse gas emissions from
other commercial and industrial sources.
"Massive and rapidly imposed restrictions on greenhouse gas emissions
would harm the American economy and hit every American in his or her
wallet," said Charles T. Drevna, president of the National Petrochemical
& Refiners Association, one of the groups signing the letter.
"If EPA's aggressive campaign to regulate greenhouse gases under the
Clean Air Act is successful, it will add billions of dollars to the cost
of doing business in the United States, raise the cost of energy and
other products for American families, wipe out the jobs of millions of
American workers, and simply shift greenhouse gas emissions from the
United States to other nations without any increase in environmental
protection," Drevna added.
"Restrictions on greenhouse gas emissions were never authorized or
contemplated by members of Congress when they enacted the Clean Air
Act," Drevna said. "Sen. Murkowski's resolution simply recognizes this
truth and calls a halt to EPA's greenhouse gas campaign before it harms
the American economy, destroys American jobs, and costs families and
farmers billions of dollars."
The letter's signatories also urged senators to reject any effort to
codify the EPA's recently released "tailoring" rule into law. That rule
would subject only stationary sources of greenhouse gas emissions of
100,000 tons or more annually to state government permitting
requirements under the Clean Air Act. The Clean Air Act, however, sets a
permitting threshold of 250 tons annually for emissions from major
sources.
Groups signing the letter are: American Coke and Coal Chemicals
Institute; American Iron and Steel Institute; American Health Care
Association; American Petroleum Institute; Associated General
Contractors of America; The Center for North American Energy Security;
Corn Refiners Association; Industrial Energy Consumers of America;
Industrial Minerals Association - North America; International Warehouse
Logistics Association; Metals Service Center Institute; National
Association of Convenience Stores; National Association of
Manufacturers; National Cattlemen's Beef Association; National Center
for Assisted Living; National Mining Association; National Petrochemical
& Refiners Association; Natural Gas Supply Association; Portland Cement
Association; Society of Independent Gasoline Marketers of America; Small
Business & Entrepreneurship Council; The Fertilizer Institute; U.S.
Chamber of Commerce; and U.S. Oil and Gas Association.
SOURCE National Petrochemical & Refiners Association
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