Environmental Economics at EPA

EPA’s Science Advisory Board is considering feedback to EPA’s 2008 draft guidelines on economic analysis. The preliminary SAB draft makes a number of  interesting points:

  1. EPA needs to recongize that it’s discretion is limited: “only the legislative branch has the power to tax, subsidize, or assign liability, and both the Clean Water Act and the Clean Air Act very clearly specify what kinds of regulations EPA may promulgate.”
  2. The guidelines are badly out of date, particularly with regard to methods for valuing environmental benefits.  “We urge the Agency to vastly expand its guidance on charectorizing and valuing non-monetized ecosystems and services.”
  3. EPA needs to begin working a “more complex, interdisciplinary analysis for a host of issues relating to greenhouse gas emissions.”  The Guidelines “should anticipate a changing role for economics amids the extraordinary complexity posed by climate change and other global processes.
  4. “The proliferation of geographic information systems ad remote systems to obtan data provide new opportunities for policy design.”

In the meantime, OMB is working on a proposed Executive Order on cost-benefit analysis, although that might have to await Cass Sunstein’s eventual confirmation as head of OIRA.

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About Dan

Dan Farber has written and taught on environmental and constitutional law as well as about contracts, jurisprudence and legislation. Currently at Berkeley Law, he has al…

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About Dan

Dan Farber has written and taught on environmental and constitutional law as well as about contracts, jurisprudence and legislation. Currently at Berkeley Law, he has al…

READ more

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