CRS Report Released: Clean Air Issues in the 112th Congress
by Taryn Rucinski
Summary
Air
quality has improved substantially in the United States in the 40 years
of EPA’s Clean Air Act regulation, but more needs to be done, according
to the agency’s science advisers, to protect public health and the
environment from the effects of air pollution. Thus, the agency
continues to promulgate regulations addressing air pollution using
authority given it by Congress more than 20 years ago. In the 112th
Congress, Members from both parties raised questions about the
cost-effectiveness of some of these regulations and/or whether the
agency has exceeded its regulatory authority in promulgating them.
Others in Congress have supported EPA, noting that the Clean Air Act,
often affirmed in court decisions, authorized or required the agency’s
actions.
EPA’s
regulatory actions on greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions were one focus of
congressional interest. Although the Obama Administration consistently
said that it would prefer that Congress pass new legislation to address
climate change, such legislation was not considered in the 112th
Congress. Instead, EPA developed GHG regulations using its existing
Clean Air Act authority. EPA finalized GHG emission standards for cars
and light trucks on April 1, 2010, and August 28, 2012, and for larger
trucks on August 9, 2011. The implementation of these standards, in
turn, triggered permitting and Best Available Control Technology
requirements for new major stationary sources of GHGs.
It
was the triggering of standards for stationary sources (power plants,
manufacturing facilities, etc.) that raised the most concern in the 112th
Congress: legislation was considered in both the House and Senate aimed
at preventing EPA from implementing these requirements. In the first
session of the 112th Congress, the House passed H.R. 1, which contained
provisions prohibiting the use of appropriated funds to implement
various EPA GHG regulatory activities, and H.R. 910, a bill that would
have repealed EPA’s endangerment finding, redefined “air pollutants” to
exclude greenhouse gases, and prohibited EPA from promulgating any
regulation to address climate change. In the Senate, H.R. 1 was
defeated, and an amendment identical to H.R. 910 (S.Amdt. 183) failed on
a vote of 50-50.
EPA
took action on a number of other air pollutant regulations, generally
in response to court actions remanding previous rules. Remanded rules
included the Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR) and the Clean Air Mercury
Rule—rules designed to control the long-range transport of sulfur
dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and mercury from power plants through
cap-and-trade programs. Other remanded rules included hazardous air
pollutant (“MACT”) standards for boilers and cement kilns. EPA addressed
the court remands through new regulations that have now been
promulgated. Many in Congress viewed the new regulations as overly
stringent. The House passed four bills (H.R. 2250, H.R. 2401, H.R. 2681,
and H.R. 3409) to delay or revoke the new standards and change the
statutory requirements for their replacements.
In
addition to the power plant and MACT rules, EPA also reviewed ambient
air quality standards (NAAQS) for ozone, particulates, and other
widespread air pollutants. These standards serve as EPA’s definition of
clean air, and drive a range of regulatory controls. The revised NAAQS
also faced opposition in the 112th Congress. As passed by the House,
H.R. 2401 and H.R. 3409 would have amended the Clean Air Act to require
EPA to consider feasibility and cost in setting NAAQS, and H.R. 1633
would have prevented EPA from setting standards for ambient
concentrations of rural dust.
No comments:
Post a Comment