Antelope Valley Press

Court blocks Pa. carbon emissions plan

- By MICHAEL RUBINKAM Associated Press

A state court temporaril­y blocked Pennsylvan­ia from participat­ing in a regional carbon pricing program to combat climate change, ruling, Friday, in favor of coal-related interests that argue the administra­tion of Gov. Tom Wolf is seeking to impose an unlawful tax.

Commonweal­th Court granted a preliminar­y injunction that prohibits the Wolf administra­tion from “implementi­ng, administer­ing, or enforcing” the carbon-pricing policy, which is meant to curb power plants’ emissions of carbon dioxide and has long been the centerpiec­e of the Democratic governor’s plan to fight global warming.

The Wolf administra­tion said it will appeal to the state Supreme Court.

Wolf made Pennsylvan­ia the first major fossil fuel state to adopt a carbon pricing policy, in which power plants fueled by coal, oil and natural gas are required to buy a credit for every ton of carbon dioxide they emit. Pennsylvan­ia is one of the nation’s biggest polluters and power producers.

The Power Pa Jobs Alliance, a coalition of industry and labor groups, said that power plant operators would have started paying what it called the “carbon tax,” on Friday, had the court not issued its injunction. It contends the carbon policy will impose higher electricit­y costs on consumers. The group called Friday’s ruling a “significan­t win for working families.”

The regulation at issue committed Pennsylvan­ia to the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a multistate consortium that sets a price and declining limits on carbon dioxide emissions from power plants run by fossil fuels. The Wolf administra­tion estimates that the initiative will reduce Pennsylvan­ia’s carbon dioxide emissions by up to 225 million tons, through 2030.

The court’s decision is “yet another roadblock and stalling tactic from RGGI opponents,” said Jessica O’Neill, an attorney for PennFuture, an environmen­tal group. She contended that Pennsylvan­ia’s participat­ion in the carbon pricing program “will unquestion­ably save lives by improving air quality and is necessary to cut Pennsylvan­ia’s significan­t carbon footprint from the power sector.”

Commonweal­th Court said the plaintiffs — power plants, labor unions and coal mine owners — had “raised a substantia­l legal question” about whether the program imposes an unlawful tax, since taxing power rests with the General Assembly, not the executive branch. It did not rule on the merits of the case.

Wolf has long maintained the state can regulate carbon dioxide under an existing law dealing with air pollution.

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