What the EPA wants

Yesterday I posted an item refuting a Politico headline suggesting that a Daily Caller story about the EPA’s global warming regulations was “not based in fact.” The Daily Caller has since published an editor’s note citing my post and asserting it “agreed with” their analysis.

While there is much in the original Daily Caller story I do agree with, some of it, I think, does misread EPA’s intentions. DC executive editor David Martosko wrote to The Washington Post‘s Greg Sargent defending the story:

Our story about the EPA was spot-on and accurate. It’s true that the agency’s court filing outlined a “tailoring rule” as a more gradual approach to hiring 230,000 people at a cost of $21 billion. But the EPA was clear that “the Tailoring Rule is calculated to move toward eventual full compliance with the statutory threshold” — meaning it’s not a question of if the EPA wants to triple its budget, but when.

I don’t believe that the EPA wants to hire 230,000 new people at a cost of $21 billion. What they do want to do is unilaterally rewrite the Clean Air Act. As I explained yesterday:

The problem is that the Clean Air Act was never designed to regulate carbon. The CAA requires the EPA to issue permits for all “sources” that emit more than 100 tons of a “pollutant” a year. This standard, which is in the statute, works great for real pollutants like mercury and sulfur dioxide. But carbon is not a real pollutant and was never intended to be classified as a pollutant under the CAA. It is ubiquitous in our environment, is non-toxic to humans, and many entities, like churches, schools, and hospitals, emit far mare than 100 tons of carbon every year. If the EPA were to treat carbon as a pollutant under the CAA, the Institute for Energy Research (IER) estimates the EPA would have to issue permits for “260,000 office buildings, 150,000 warehouses, 100,000 schools, 92,000 health care facilities, 58,000 food service buildings, 37,000 churches, 26,000 places of public assembly, and 17,000 farms.”
The EPA court filing essentially confirms IER’s predictions of economic Armageddon should EPA regulate greenhouse gasses. EPA wants to get around this problem by rewriting the statutory 100 ton pollutant limit. But the EPA has no legal authority to rewrite the law in this manner. Hence the lawsuit.

The EPA wants to regulate carbon, but they want to do it on their terms, not the terms provided by the Clean Air Act under current law. Similarly, Education Secretary Arne Duncan wants to use No Child Left Behind to force states to implement reforms he likes, not the ones actually provided by NCLB. As President Obama said when he announced his NCLB waiver program last Friday, “Given that Congress cannot act, I am acting.” Obama, Duncan, and Jackson may all want to act here, but they have no legal authority to do so. Libya and the War Powers Act also comes to mind here.

The EPA would no doubt prefer that Congress pass a new law specifically designed to give them the tools to regulate carbon. But, given that Congress is not acting on global warming, the EPA is, and they have no qualms about flushing the rule of law down the toilet to do it.

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