Posted by Jonathan Adler:
EPA Issues Endangerment and Contribution Findings:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_04_12-2009_04_18.shtml#1240072108


   Yesterday, as expected, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
   issued a proposed finding that emissions of six greenhouse gases,
   including carbon dioxide, pose a threat to public health and welfare
   due to their contribution to global warming. The EPA further found
   that the emission of such gases from motor vehicles contribute to
   dangerous concentrations in the atmosphere. The EPA announcement is
   [1]here.

   The proposed findings will now go through a 60-day public comment
   period. Shortly thereafter, the findings will be finalized. Industry
   and anti-regulatory groups will almost certainly challenge the
   findings in court, and their legal challenges will almost certainly
   fail. Even if one doubts the accumulated scientific evidence that
   anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases contribute to climate
   change and that climate change is a serious environmental concern, the
   standard of review is such that the EPA will have no difficulty
   defending its rule. Federal courts are extremely deferential to agency
   assessments of the relevant scientific evidence when reviewing such
   determinations. Moreover, under the Clean Air Act, the EPA
   Administrator need only "reasonably . . . anticipate" in her own
   "judgment" that GHG emissions threaten public health and welfare in
   order to make the findings, and there is ample evidence upon which the
   EPA Administrator could conclude that climate change is a serious
   threat. This is a long way of saying that even if climate skeptics are
   correct, the EPA has ample legal authority to make the endangerment
   findings.

   Once the findings are finalized, the EPA will then be required to
   develop regulatory standards for new motor vehicles under Section 202
   of the Act. As a practical matter, the EPA will also have to prepare
   to regulate greenhouse gas emissions under other portions of the act,
   as the relevant endangerment findings necessary to trigger such
   regulation are effectively identical to that which triggers motor
   vehicle emission regulation under Section 202. Even if the EPA sought
   to resist such regulation, it would be relatively easy to force the
   EPA's hand through additional citizen suits, much like the suits that
   set the EPA on this course in the first place.

   Now that the EPA is on course to set greenhouse gas emission standards
   for new motor vehicles, it will be interesting to see how the Agency
   handles California's request for a Clean Air Act waiver for its own
   state-level vehicle emission standards. One of California's arguments
   was that it was particularly concerned about (and threatened by)
   climate change, and thus wanted to adopt its own regulations. But if
   the EPA is going to set national greenhouse gas emission standards, it
   is not clear why California should be able to have standards of its
   own. The automakers, for their part, will certainly argue that a
   single federal standard is more efficient and will impose fewer costs
   on consumers. Furthermore, given the global nature of climate change,
   the argument for allowing an individual state to go its own way is
   much weaker than where environmental concerns are more localized. And,
   if the new federal standard ends up being as stringent as those
   developed by California, the waiver issue would be moot.

   Regulating greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act will not be a
   particularly cost-effective way to reduce the nation's greenhouse gas
   emissions. The EPA and White House understand this, but they also
   recognize that, under Massachusetts v. EPA, the agency does not have
   much choice. Moreover, the threat of Clean Air Act regulations on
   greenhouse gases will create significant pressure upon Congress to
   replace such regulation with some alternative, such as the
   cap-and-trade program. I suspect this is one reason the Administration
   has not complained too much about Congress refusal to embrace
   cap-and-trade in the budget. It's okay to set climate policy aside
   now, they could reckon, as there will be significantly more political
   pressure to act on the issue later. Perhaps by then there will also be
   greater political willingness to consider alternatives to
   cap-and-trade.

References

   1. http://epa.gov/climatechange/endangerment.html

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