Los Angeles Times

STATE FIGHTS TRUMP ON COAL

California joins 21 others in effort to stop administra­tion’s effort to gut restrictio­ns.

- By Phil Willon

SACRAMENTO — California and a coalition of 21 other states on Tuesday sued to block the Trump administra­tion’s attempt to gut restrictio­ns on coalburnin­g power plants, limits that were central to President Obama’s climate change policy.

State Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra said Trump’s effort to dismantle the 2015 Clean Power Plan undercuts efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and allows the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency to abandon its legal responsibi­lity to crack down on air pollution.

“The EPA and the Trump administra­tion are backslidin­g once again, bending over backwards for special interests at the expense of the public’s interest,” Becerra told reporters during a morning news conference in Sacramento. “California doesn’t have time for flimsy fake substitute­s to clean power. Our health, our economy, our future as the engine of prosperity and innovation in America are at stake.”

The federal lawsuit was filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington by the 22-state coalition, with New York taking the lead, as well

as major cities that include Los Angeles, New York and Chicago.

The legal action is just the latest effort by California to block the Trump administra­tion’s dismantlin­g of federal environmen­tal protection­s adopted by Obama and other previous administra­tions.

In July, California circumvent­ed the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to relax tailpipe pollution regulation­s by reaching a deal with four major automakers to gradually increase fuel-efficiency standards.

California has filed more than 50 lawsuits over Trump administra­tion actions on a variety of issues, including more than two dozen challenges to policies proposed by the EPA, the U.S. Department of the Interior and other federal agencies responsibl­e for setting energy and fuel-efficiency standards.

In late March, a federal judge in Northern California struck down the administra­tion’s repeal of a rule aimed at increasing oil and gas companies’ royalty payments, and in April, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco put up a new roadblock to the administra­tion’s plans to reverse an Obama-era decision to ban a popular pesticide suspected of harming infants’ brain developmen­t.

The state has prevailed in at least 15 of those lawsuits, and Becerra said he expects to be victorious again challengin­g Trump’s attempt to roll back restrictio­ns on coal-burning power plants.

“We have confidence not just in the law, but that the science and facts are with us on this case,” Becerra said.

The Trump administra­tion’s proposed plan, called the Affordable Clean Energy rule, eliminates what had been an aggressive nationwide effort to reduce the energy sector’s carbon footprint. The move is also designed to make good on Trump’s campaign promise to revive the nation’s coal industry.

An EPA representa­tive said the agency does not comment on pending litigation. The representa­tive defended the revised policy, however, saying the “EPA worked diligently to ensure we produced a solid rule, that we believe will be upheld in the courts” and noted that the Obama administra­tion’s Clean Power Plan was successful­ly blocked from being implemente­d after a legal challenge.

After the Trump administra­tion rule was announced in June, Gov. Gavin Newsom vowed to join with other states in taking legal action to block the new policy.

Newsom joined Becerra at Tuesday’s news conference along with state Environmen­tal Protection Agency Secretary Jared Blumenfeld and California Air Resources Board Chair Mary Nichols.

The governor warned that climate change threatens both lives and livelihood­s, and criticized the Trump administra­tion for failing to take action and sending the nation backward.

“All I will ask to this administra­tion: How can you look in the eyes of your grandkids and kids and say that anything you are doing is about them,” Newsom said. “They are in the shortterm business. They are absolutely, absolutely neglecting the next generation.”

Newsom said Trump’s tenure in the White House has made him “miss” the bipartisan environmen­tal advances made while President Nixon, a Republican, was in the White House, including adopting the Endangered Species Act and creating the EPA.

The governor said California’s economy has thrived while the state has taken aggressive efforts to curtail carbon emissions and climate change.

“We see where the world is going and where the future lies,” Newsom said.

The 1970s-era Clean Air Act requires the federal government to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, and the Trump administra­tion may have difficulty convincing the courts that its Affordable Clean Energy rule does so.

Older coal-burning plants that faced almost certain obsolescen­ce under the Clean Power Plan would be allowed to stay open with modest modificati­ons under the Trump administra­tion plan.

Energy experts doubt that Trump’s more lax approach will reverse the coal industry’s decline.

Coal has been steadily losing its foothold in the U.S. energy marketplac­e to cheaper natural gas and renewable sources such as wind and solar.

Though the industry has blamed government regulation­s such as the Clean Power Plan for making it noncompeti­tive, domestic demand for coal has fallen even without the Obamaera rule ever taking effect.

 ?? Mark Wilson Getty Images ?? CALIFORNIA Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra says he expects a win in the fight to limit President Trump’s attempt to roll back limits on coal.
Mark Wilson Getty Images CALIFORNIA Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra says he expects a win in the fight to limit President Trump’s attempt to roll back limits on coal.

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