“Cementing” the GOP’s Environmental Policy in Place

It looks like an early agenda item for the GOP will be eliminating EPA's regulation of cement plants, according to press reports.  H.J. Res. 100 would repeal the regulation and prevent any future similar regulation.  Economists and environmentalists should be equally unhappy with this rollback effort. This is one regulation where the cost-benefit analysis seems to come out firmly on the environmental side, according to the NY Times environmental blog, The E.P.A. estim...

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Plenty of blame to go around

The Oil Spill Commission has released a chapter from its upcoming report on the Deepwater Horizon disaster. The Commission describes this chapter as containing the report's "key findings". The chapter focuses on the operations immediately preceding the explosion. According to the Commission, BP, Halliburton, Transocean, the oil industry as a whole, Congress, and multiple presidential administrations all share responsibility for the blow-out and its consequences. From ...

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Governor Brown makes his first environmental appointments

Jerry Brown has hit the ground running not only in terms of budget work but in putting together his environmental policy team. Today he announced the re-appointment of Mary Nichols as Chair of the California Air Resources Board and the appointment of John Laird as Secretary of the California Natural Resources Agency. Nichols' reappointment is an excellent move that won't surprise anyone. She first served as ARB Chair during Brown's second term from 1979 to 1983. And s...

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The “Rebound Effect” Falls Flat

Prompted in part by a recent article in the New Yorker, there's been a lot of attention to the rebound effect lately.  The theory is that increased energy efficiency in effect makes energy cheaper (as measured in cost per unit of benefit), so people actually consumer more energy.  The empirical evidence is that this is a relatively small effect, far outweighed by the energy savings from efficiency, as Greenwire reports.  But some people argue that the rebound effect a...

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The Schwarzenegger Legacy: Environmentalism on the Cheap

As Californians say "hasta la vista, baby" to Governor Schwarzenegger this morning, media retrospectives have focused on his environmental accomplishments as one of his few positive legacies. Specifically, they point to his signing of AB 32, the landmark climate change law limiting the state's greenhouse gas emissions. And Schwarzenegger himself likes to think of himself as an environmentally friendly Republican. But how "green" was his administration? While the Go...

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The Legal Underpinnings of EPA’s Climate Rules

The Clean Air Act is a formidably technical and complex statute -- I often tell my students that it's like the Internal Revenue Code except not as clearly written.  But even those who know the statute may have been surprised by a couple of provisions that EPA is using to address greenhouse gases. The first provision is buried in the section governing pollution requirements for new stationary sources like power plants.  Mostly, these requirements involve pollutants tha...

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Changing the Climate in the Bay State

Massachusetts has adopted an ambitious goal of reducing GHG levels 20% below the 1990 level by 2020.  According the NY Times, the program involves a mix of tools: Importing more hydropower from Quebec. Reducing vehicle miles driven through insurance incentives. Encouraging owners of old oil furnaces to replace them with more efficient systems. Using the existing cap-and-trade system adopted by Northeastern states to control emissions from electricity generators. E...

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What to Expect This Year in Terms of Climate Action

Although there will be many flashing lights and loud noises, 2011 will primarily be a year in which various events that are already in play evolve toward major developments in 2012. Litigation. The one exceptional major development in 2011 will be American Electric Power (AEP) v. Connecticut, the climate nuisance case that the Supreme Court has agreed to hear.  The odds are good that the Court will throw out the case, the interesting question being what ground the Cour...

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EPA Takes the First Step

The  NY Times has a story about EPA's climate change regs that doesn't contain anything newsworthy but does get the facts right.  The key facts are these: 1.  EPA has little choice about regulating given the Supreme Court's interpretation of the Clean Air Act in 2007. "With Mr. Obama’s hand forced by the mandates of the Clean Air Act and a 2007 Supreme Court decision, his E.P.A. will impose the first regulation of major stationary sources of greenhouse gases star...

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The Incoming Congressional Freshmen

Politico has a nice posting about the incoming freshman GOP in the House and their views on environment and energy issues.  The bottom line: House Republican freshmen looking to make names for themselves on energy issues in the next Congress have some goals in common: Ramp up domestic energy production, roll back the Obama administration’s environmental rules and ensure that cap-and-trade stays dead. Like the Bush Administration, these freshmen seem mostly to be orien...

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