Texarkana Gazette

Environmen­tal justice advocates slam a Supreme Court ruling

- Drew Costley

The Supreme Court decision to limit how the Environmen­tal Protection Agency regulates carbon dioxide emissions from power plants could make an already grave situation worse for those affected most by climate change and air pollution, advocates say.

Environmen­tal and climate justice advocates from across the United States are decrying the court’s 6-3 ruling, saying it will be felt most by communitie­s of color and poor communitie­s, which are located near power plants at higher percentage­s than the national average. They are calling on the EPA to find alternate ways to limit carbon dioxide emissions and other forms of air pollution, and for Congress to grant the agency the authority to do so.

The court did not prohibit the EPA from regulating carbon emissions, in fact Chief Justice John Roberts said capping carbon emissions to move the U.S. away from burning coal for electricit­y “may be sensible for the crisis of the day.”

Despite this, advocates said the ruling puts disadvanta­ged communitie­s at risk of greater harm due to the effects of climate change and air pollution. They also are concerned about the ability of the EPA to enforce other bedrock environmen­tal laws, like the Clean Water Act.

The Supreme Court decision “denies relief to Black and other communitie­s of color as well as poor communitie­s disproport­ionately exposed to power plant pollution and vulnerable to climate change,” Monique Harden, assistant director of law and policy at the Deep South Center for Environmen­tal Justice told the Associated Press.

Harden’s organizati­on has done extensive research on the effects of heavy industry on people living along the Mississipp­i River Chemical Corridor — also known to some as Cancer Alley — a stretch of petrochemi­cal plants and oil refineries.

That corridor touches New Orleans and Baton Rouge, two cities that have experience­d intense storm surges and hurricanes worsened by climate change over the last 20 years. And Baton Rouge has a power plant, Big Cajun II, with two coal-fired units that’s owned by Cleco Power.

Thousands of miles west the Supreme Court decision was just as alarming to Darryl Molina Sarmiento, executive director of Communitie­s for a Better Environmen­t. She said the ruling is part of a decadeslon­g effort by the fossil fuel industry to strip the EPA of its ability to protect vulnerable communitie­s, including those that live alongside power plants.

“Because the entire western grid is connected, a polluting power plant in Southeast L.A. can be supplying power to wealthy white communitie­s in Utah,” she said. The same is true when California imports power from coal-fired power plants in Arizona and the low-income communitie­s of color that surround them there are polluted, she said.

On a press briefing with the Green New Deal Network, a nationwide coalition of environmen­tal organizati­ons, U.S. Rep. Jamaal Bowman expressed concern that the decision could set a precedent that will limit regulatory agencies in their ability to protect human health.

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