Court upholds EPA rules on climate pollution
Landmark legal decision will protect public health.
Protecting future generations is at the heart of why Environment Defense Fund supports greenhouse
gas limits.
In a major victory for clean air, a federal appeals court in June 2012
upheld the Environmental Protection Agency’s first nationwide protections
limiting greenhouse gas emissions from new vehicles and large new industrial
sources. The decision deals a decisive blow to companies and states that have
fought for years to delay steps to address climate change.
“This ruling confirms that EPA’s common sense solutions to address climate pollution
are firmly anchored in science and law,” said EDF president Fred Krupp. “This
landmark decision will help secure a healthier and more prosperous future for
all Americans.”
The U.S Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit dismissed an array
of lawsuits from industry groups and states such as Texas and Virginia that
would have undermined vital clean air protections.
“This is how science works. EPA is not required to re-prove the existence of
the atom every time it approaches a scientific question.”
The science-based foundation for EPA’s emission limits on
climate pollution was the so-called Endangerment Finding, in which EPA
determined that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions constitute a
danger to public health and could thus be regulated under the Clean Air Act.
The court upheld three related regulations as well:
- Clean Car Standards, which is aimed at significantly reducing greenhouse gases from cars and light trucks while improving fuel efficiency.
- The Timing Rule, which addresses the timetable for large new industrial sources to deploy best-available cost-effective pollution controls for greenhouse gases.
- The Tailoring Rule, which focuses the requirement to implement the best-available controls on new, large industrial emitters (like power plants) first while shielding smaller emitters.
In a unanimous opinion, the three-member panel of the appeals court, led by
Chief Judge David Sentelle (a Reagan appointee), found that EPA’s
interpretation of the Clean Air Act provisions in question was “unambiguously
correct” and that the agency had based its case on careful research and sound
science.
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