On June 2, 2014, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
released its much anticipated program to regulate carbon dioxide emissions from
existing power plants to address climate change. Called the Clean Power Plan,
EPA's proposal sets aggressive targets that each state with fossil fuel-fired
electric generation (only Vermont and the District of Columbia are without such
generation) must meet by 2030, along with interim targets that the states must
meet on average during the years 2020 to 2029. The EPA projects that the Clean
Power Plan will result in a 30 percent reduction in power plant carbon dioxide
emissions as compared to 2005 emissions.
The problem is that the plan makes EPA the primary energy
regulator in the United States — usurping the authority of the expert state and
federal agencies assigned that task. This plainly exceeds the scope of EPA's
authority under the Clean Air Act. That act establishes EPA as the primary
regulator of air emissions within the United States, and EPA has filled that
role for more than 40 years, dramatically cutting emissions of pollutants such
as sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides and particulate matter from power plants.
The difference in this case is that EPA would accomplish emission reductions
primarily through changes in the way energy is produced, distributed and used —
and not through the application of emission-control technology on affected
power plants. Imposing an energy management regulatory scheme is beyond EPA's
authority.
Unlike other pollutants, no technology exists to reduce
carbon dioxide emissions from an existing power plant. The only way to reduce
carbon dioxide emissions is to burn fewer fossil fuels. That means burning less
coal, because coal combustion results in about twice as many carbon dioxide
emissions as natural gas combustion does. To meet the rates established by EPA,
many states are going to have to rely far more heavily on natural gas
generation than coal, and EPA's Clean Power Plan contemplates that natural gas
generation will be dispatched before coal generation.
Under the existing system, the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, state public utility commissions and regional transmission
organizations determine the priority for which power plants will operate (and
how hard they will operate) to serve the demand for electricity. This is a
complex undertaking that involves the balancing of factors including electric
reliability (ensuring the lights stay on) and economics (ensuring electricity
remains affordable).
Under EPA's Clean Power Plan, the agencies with expertise
in these critical matters will no longer be in charge. EPA will become the de
facto energy regulator in the United States, usurping the authority given by
Congress and the states to those agencies with the relevant expertise. Without
considering economics, national security, reliability or other considerations
that drive how we generate electricity, natural gas and other low-emitting
generation (such as nuclear, renewable energy, and hydropower) will have to
take priority over coal-fired generation.
AGGRANDIZEMENT OF AUTHORITY
This aggrandizement of EPA's authority has already occurred
in the context of motor vehicles. Congress gave the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA) the authority to establish fuel-economy standards
for motor vehicles. EPA's regulation of greenhouse-gas emissions from motor
vehicles, however, has rendered NHTSA practically irrelevant in this area. As
with power plants, there is no technology that can be added to a vehicle to
reduce its carbon dioxide emissions. The only way to accomplish this is for the
vehicle to burn less gasoline. In the furtherance of its goals of reducing
carbon dioxide emissions, since 2011, EPA has established three sets of rigorous
fuel-economy standards under the Clean Air Act for passenger cars and trucks.
This flies in the face of Congress' intention that NHTSA — the agency with the
relevant expertise — be responsible for these standards.
If EPA's Clean Power Plan goes forward, the same will be
true with regard to the nation's electricity supply. EPA's aggressive targets
for reducing carbon dioxide emissions from power plants will result in EPA —
and not the expert agencies — making the important policy judgments needed to
ensure a reliable and affordable supply of electricity. Moreover, minimizing
the use of coal, an abundant fuel source in the United States, raises issues of
national security. EPA's cost calculations regarding the regulation of carbon
dioxide emissions from power plants have been based in part on an assumption
that natural gas will remain abundant and inexpensive. There is no guarantee
natural gas prices will remain low. And, given the concerns, that have been
raised with regard to "fracking" (the primary reason why natural gas
supplies in the United States are abundant), there is no guarantee that supply
will remain high.
EPA's Clean Power Plan is a bridge too far. Although the
U.S. Supreme Court made clear in Massachusetts v. EPA that the agency has the
authority to regulate greenhouse-gas emissions under the Clean Air Act, nothing
within that act authorizes EPA to become the principal energy regulator in the
United States, regardless of how laudable its goals. For EPA to have the
authority to implement a program like the Clean Power Plan, Congress would need
to enact new legislation providing such authority and giving EPA the
appropriate guidance to cabin such authority. |