Chattanooga Times Free Press

COURT WAS RIGHT TO BLOCK EPA’S POWER GRAB

- Derrick Morgan is the executive vice president of The Heritage Foundation.

The “Spirit of ‘76” is alive and well at the Supreme Court. Back then, the colonials rejected the rule of a far-away, unaccounta­ble government. After securing their freedom, they quickly organized a government that gave Congress, the duly elected representa­tives of the people, responsibi­lity for making national policy decisions.

This week, the Supreme Court acted in accord with that spirit by rejecting a power grab by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and reserving for Congress the right to set far-reaching climate change policy.

The central question in West Virginia v. EPA came down to this: Who is responsibl­e for determinin­g if carbon emissions are a problem and whether something should be done about it? You may recall that President Barack Obama spent more than a year trying to convince Congress to pass a comprehens­ive bill to reduce emissions as a way of trying to stem climate change. Ultimately, he even threatened Congress, saying that if lawmakers didn’t act to reduce carbon emissions, he would — with his pen and his phone. Yet even though his own party had a House majority and a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate, Congress balked at capping carbon emissions.

Obama followed through on his threats in the form of the “Clean Power Plan” — the EPA’s proposal to force whole states and utilities to stop using fossil fuels in favor of less reliable, and often more expensive, sources like wind and solar. Always inventive, Obama asserted that the EPA could stretch the authoritie­s in the Clean Air Act, written in 1970 to deal with toxic pollutants.

Up to that point, the law had been used to reduce toxic emissions source by source, using the best available technology. So, for example, the EPA could require an available scrubber be added to a coal plant to reduce sulfur dioxide. Now, Obama claimed, the EPA could use a systems approach and require states and utilities to switch fuel sources altogether, essentiall­y completely remaking the entire electricit­y grid.

Several states, led by West Virginia, sued the EPA. On Thursday, the court ruled that Congress must specify authority clearly for an agency to be authorized to implement a policy of such vast economic and political significan­ce.

No matter what your view of climate change, we should all agree that Congress is the right venue to have this issue debated and decided. Unlike the EPA’s employees, who can’t be voted out of office, lawmakers are accountabl­e to “We, the People.” Representa­tives and senators can make compromise­s that include carefully considered trade-offs, and their work will endure past one administra­tion.

President Joe Biden has pledged to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 50-52% by 2030. My colleagues at The Heritage Foundation estimate that taking the steps needed to make such drastic reductions would result in nearly 8 million lost jobs in 2026, a 90% increase in gasoline prices, and a more than $7 trillion hit to the economy. That’s vast economic significan­ce, indeed.

And it’s why the “elephant” of carbon capping policy should be debated by Congress, not advanced through rulemaking by unaccounta­ble bureaucrat­s. In fact, carbon reductions have been debated repeatedly — and always rejected, including in 2006 and 2010. Some are not happy with that result, but their dissatisfa­ction should motivate them to persuade their neighbors of the wisdom of their policy.

Now, thanks to the West Virginia v. EPA decision, Biden’s climate plans and the inevitable trade-offs can be examined through hearings and a robust debate by representa­tives who are accountabl­e to the people.

 ?? ?? Derrick Morgan
Derrick Morgan

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