The key event in the Environmental Protection
Agency’s campaign to regulate carbon dioxide as a pollutant came on April 2,
2007. It was the Supreme Court’s decision in Massachusetts v.
Environmental Protection Agency.
Justice John Paul Stevens, writing for a five-member majority, held that the
EPA had a duty to decide whether greenhouse gas emissions from new vehicles are
contributing to “air pollution which may reasonably be anticipated to endanger
public health or welfare.”
Six years later, the apocalyptic predictions about
global warming have not been borne out, notwithstanding the dire rhetoric of Justice
Stevens’s opinion. The earth’s temperature has remained stable in the face of
increasing concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Indeed,
according to measurements
from the Climatic Research Unit of the University of East Anglia, “The Earth's
average temperature warmed by 1.4ºF (0.8ºC) between the 1850s and 2000s, mostly
during 1911-1944 and 1976-1998”—before the upsurge of carbon dioxide
concentrations in the atmosphere over the last 15 years.
Nonetheless, on this issue, the EPA is unwilling to
alter the form or pace of its regulations in light of the new data that shows
no trend of global warming. Clearly, the issue is a lot more complicated than
was previously thought.
A Tale of Four
EPA Rulings
The consequences of Massachusetts
have been vast. Once the EPA was safely in Democratic hands, two decisions
followed inexorably from the 2007 Massachusetts
decision. In December 2009, the EPA, under the Obama Administration, issued the
Endangerment Rule
with respect to carbon dioxide that Massachusetts had sought in earlier
litigation. Then, in May 2010, the EPA issued its Tailpipe Rule
governing emissions from new motor vehicles.
The EPA’s endangerment rule relies, as it is surely
entitled to do, on the premise from the Massachusetts
case that carbon dioxide counts as a pollutant, even though in some
concentrations it is, unlike the other pollutants on the list, essential to
life. Indeed, in its ruling, the EPA obscures the distinctive role of carbon
dioxide by blending it on a list of “well mixed greenhouse gases,” namely,
carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons,
and sulfur hexafluoride. The latter five gases raise vastly different problems
than those posed by carbon dioxide.
The Massachusetts
decision also takes no note of an anomaly within the statute that deals with
the minimum quantity restrictions that trigger EPA oversight of emissions.
Title I of the Clean Air Act (CAA) sets standards for the Prevention of
Significant Deterioration (PSD), which treats as a “major” source of pollution
any facility that has a potential to emit 250 tons per year of the designated
pollutant. Similarly, Title V governs emission requirements for major
stationary sources; it calls for permitting regulations if they exceed a
threshold of 100 tons per year.
One of the strongest arguments against adding
carbon dioxide to the list of pollutants formulated under the CAA is that it
would increase the number of regulated facilities from about 280 to over
81,000, which could require, according to recent estimates, an additional $21 billion to
process.
Massachusetts
also magnifies the major defect in statutory design, which stems from the
decision to apply emission restrictions only to new motor vehicles. The key
danger here is that any increase in the cost of new motor vehicles will raise
prices in ways that will slow down the speed at which older vehicles with
higher pollution levels are traded in for new vehicles, which emitted much
lower levels of pollution even before the case. The EPA’s dense regulations
never once utter the word “incentive” or the phrase “substitution effect” as
grounds for examining the potential unintended consequences of its
counterproductive rule.
Last, the Endangerment Rule briefly notes that the
definition of pollution that applies to new motor vehicles “automatically”
carries over to both Title I and Title V of the CAA. That particular point was
never addressed in Massachusetts,
which confined its analysis to new motor vehicles. In so doing, Justice Stevens
denied that the expanded EPA jurisdiction would lead to “extreme measures.”
Just that concern led a narrow majority of the Supreme Court, in the 2000 case FDA v. Brown &
Williamson, to deny the
FDA jurisdiction to regulate tobacco as a drug under the Federal Drug and
Cosmetic Act.
Nonetheless, the EPA expanded its reach in its
April 2010 Timing Rule, which held that so long as carbon dioxide is a
pollutant under Massachusetts,
it automatically counts as pollution under Title I and Title V of the CAA.
Thereafter in its June 2010 Tailoring Rule,
the EPA announced a program whereby it would phase in its regulation of
stationary sources, starting with permitting the largest sources, given the
manifest risks of “greatly increasing the number of required permits, imposing
undue costs on small sources, overwhelming the resources of permitting
authorities, and severely impairing the functional of the programs.”
Carbon Dioxide
in the Courts
This issue came before the D.C. Circuit Court of
Appeals in the 2012 decision Coalition for Responsible Regulation v. EPA, where
the initial panel upheld the EPA on all four rules, relying on a combination of
Massachusetts’
broad definition of “any pollutant” and its deference to the administrative
expertise of the EPA. That decision illustrates a dangerous dynamic that leads to
the expansion of environmental law—and other bodies of substantive law.
The initial decision in Massachusetts
was apparently confined to one area, motor vehicles, before anyone laid bare
the linkages with other portions of the statute. It is unclear whether Justice
Stevens would have backed down from his decision if these collateral
consequences had been put on center stage in the initial argument. But it was
probably just that point that led the current Supreme Court to take on the
knotty issues in Utility Air Regulatory Group v. EPA.
The issue of statutory interpretation presented in
this case is common in administrative proceedings. The text of a statute often
contains basic coverage provisions that are very broad, apparently sweeping
into regulatory activities that bear little if any relationship to the law’s
central purposes. For instance, in Brown
& Williamson¸ Justice Sandra Day O’Connor
tackled a very broad definition of “drug” to include articles and devices other
than food “intended to affect the structure or any function of the body.”
From these definitions, the FDA concluded that it
could regulate cigarettes as a “combination product,” whereby the cigarette
itself delivers the chemicals in tar and nicotine, which in turn surely affects
the structure and function of the body. But the simple response was that it was
absurd to apply this elaborate administrative structure to products for which
manufacturers did not claim any “therapeutic effect.” Who runs clinical trials
to find out whether tobacco is an effective agent in curing diseases?
In my view, Brown & Williamson
should have dictated the opposite result in Massachusetts.
But Justice Stevens, who was part of the dissent in Brown & Williamson,
distinguished the decision on frivolous grounds without explaining how his
broad definition of a pollutant fit within the basic structural features of the
CAA. That broad definition is producing anomalous results.
The EPA normally allows for states to develop their
own implementation plans (or SIPs) to cope with local pollution for stationary
sources. But these state-based plans make no sense in dealing with carbon
dioxide. The government’s brief
in the Appellate Court tiptoes around this issue. That omission is important
here because the pressure toward localism in the operative provisions do not
mesh at all with carbon dioxide pollution, which mixes quickly into the
atmosphere regardless of its point of emission. The risks of global warning are
tied far more closely to emissions in China and India than to stationary
sources in the United States.
The Uncertain
Future
It is clear from the extensive materials filed in
this case that the decision in Utility
Air Group will in some sense be a referendum on the earlier
decision in Massachusetts.
The arrival of Justices Sotomayor and Kagan make it likely that everything will
turn on whether Justice Anthony Kennedy pivots away from Massachusetts
on the ground that these new extensions reveal the unsoundness of the earlier
decision.
Ironically, that will turn on making the same
arguments this time around that failed in Massachusetts.
But in this instance, the move is well worth making, for the consequences of
additional EPA regulation could lead to a radical reduction in the operation of
all major public utilities, with profound economic dislocations.
The argument here does not raise the absurd and
foolish claim that all forms of environmental regulation are inappropriate. The
standard rational for direct regulation of pollution from multiple sources is
still that private rights of action cannot cope with pollution emitted from
multiple sources, given their prohibitive administrative costs. But the general
case for government regulation does not resolve the current controversy, for
just as underregulation is one risk, so too is overregulation another.
The EPA is heading in the wrong direction. The
correct approach is to encourage new, and cleaner, facilities to open that
replace existing dirty facilities. The ideal response in Utility Air Group
would be to overrule Massachusetts,
which would force Congress to start over. That outcome is not likely here, even
as the basic anomalies of the CAA come more clearly into view.
But there is enough texture and confusion in the
bowels of the CAA to allow the Supreme Court to sever the supposedly
automatic linkage between motor vehicles and stationary sources. Our current
policy on air pollution needs retooling, for in environmental regulation as
elsewhere, the means chosen are as important as the ends they seek to
implement.
1 comment:
Carbon dioxide is not a pollutant. It is a natural component of the atmosphere. Eat modified food and die with three eyes not.Believe in the destruction of the world from global warming and alarm to die goodbye, we don't need you.
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