The Sky is Falling. No, It’s Not. Regulation of Greenhouse Gases Under the Clean Air Act

As we have noted, there have been a number of arguments regarding the implications of a decision by EPA to utilize current Clean Air Act authority to regulate greenhouse gases. The Chamber of Commerce has been in the “sky is falling” camp. Nonetheless, environmentalists are already pressing President-elect Obama to regulate greenhouse gases under the CAA, without waiting for what could be a lengthy legislative process.

According to a story in the Daily Environment Report, at a recent forum held by the American Law institute and the American Bar Association, the prevailing view was that the sky would not fall and that EPA’s authority under the CAA is sufficiently flexible as to allow it to regulate greenhouse gases without regulating every source that emits more than 250 tons per year of CO2, which is the usual major source threshold for criteria pollutants – and a level that is certainly exceeded by many, many, more facilities than are currently subject to regulations.

William Harnett, director of EPA’s Air quality Policy Division, identified at least two ways to avoid regulating sources that emit greater than 250 tpy of CO2. First, he suggested that EPA could rely on “administrative necessity,” taking the position that it does not have the resources to regulate all sources above 250 tpy. Harnett also suggested that EPA could take the position that the result of regulating all sources above 250 tpy would be absurd – a proposition with which the Chamber of Commerce would probably agree – and therefore could not be what Congress intended.

I’m not sure that I would like to have had to defend either of these arguments in law school. However, as David Bookbinder, chief climate counsel at the Sierra Club noted, if EPA, business, and environmental groups all do not want EPA to regulate small sources of CO2, then, as a practical matter, EPA should be able to find a way to make CO2 regulation work under the existing CAA framework. That does not mean that everyone would be happy with the format of such regulations. However, if the Obama administration does not want to wait for Congress – or if they want to put pressure on Congress to act – EPA will probably figure out a way to regulate under the CAA.

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