The Guardian (USA)

US supreme court signals it may restrict EPA’s ability to fight climate crisis

- Oliver Milman and agencies

Several conservati­ve justices on the US supreme court signaled on Monday that they may be willing to restrict the federal government’s ability to address the climate crisis.

In a case that could have profound implicatio­ns for those affected by the crisis, the supreme court considered an argument brought by West Virginia, a major coal mining state, that the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency be limited in how it regulates planet-heating gases from the energy sector.

The Biden administra­tion wants the court to throw out the case as baseless because it doesn’t relate to any existing regulation.

But John Roberts, the chief justice, said West Virginia and other states could still claim some “harm” from rules not yet enacted.

Brett Kavanaugh, another conservati­ve, noted that the court had previously expressed “skepticism” about the government’s ability to regulate a “significan­t portion of the American economy”.

Amy Coney Barrett, like Kavanaugh nominated by Donald Trump, indicated, however, that the EPA had the expertise to regulate in this area.

The case has deeply worried environmen­tal groups, stoking fear it could hobble any effort to set strict limits on carbon pollution from coalfired plants.

“It was grotesque to hear big coal’s lawyers argue for tying EPA’s hands on cutting climate-heating pollution, even as the world’s scientists warn of a bigger, worsening swath of human suffering,” said Jason Rylander, an attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, referring to a report released on Monday by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change.

“We’re out of time and the president must act boldly now,” Rylander said.

The Biden administra­tion is already dealing with congressio­nal refusal to enact the climate change proposals in its Build Better Back domestic spending plan. Now the justices are taking up an appeal from 19 mostly Republican­led states and coal companies over whether the EPA has the authority to limit carbon dioxide emissions.

Biden has pledged to cut greenhouse gas emissions in half by the end of the decade.

A broad ruling could also weaken regulatory efforts that extend well beyond the environmen­t, including consumer protection­s, workplace safety and public health.

Several conservati­ves on the court have criticized what they see as the unchecked power of federal agencies, concerns evident in orders throwing out two Biden policies aimed at reducing the spread of Covid-19.

Last summer, the 6-3 conservati­ve majority ended a pause on evictions over unpaid rent. In January, the same six justices blocked a requiremen­t that workers at large employers be vaccinated or test regularly and wear a mask on the job.

The West Virginia attorney general, Patrick Morrisey, has cast the power plant case as about who should make the rules.

“Should it be unelected bureaucrat­s or should it be the people’s representa­tives in Congress?“Morrisey said.

David Doniger, a climate change expert with the Natural Resources Defense Council, said the court’s considerat­ion of the issue was premature. He said Biden’s opponents were advancing “horror stories about extreme regulation­s the EPA may issue in the future. The EPA is writing a new rule on a clean slate.”

The case has a long and complicate­d history that begins with the Obama administra­tion’s Clean Power Plan. That would have required states to reduce emissions from the generation of electricit­y, mainly by shifting away from coal. But it never took effect. In a 2016 lawsuit filed by West Virginia and others, the supreme court blocked it by a 5-4 vote, with conservati­ves in the majority.

After Trump took office, the EPA repealed the plan. The agency argued its authority to reduce carbon emissions was limited and it devised a new plan that sharply reduced the federal government’s role.

New York, 21 other mainly Democratic states, the District of Columbia and some of the largest US cities sued. The federal appeals court in Washington ruled against both the repeal and the new plan, leaving nothing in effect while the new administra­tion drafted a new policy.

Adding to the unusual nature of the supreme court’s involvemen­t, the reductions sought in the Obama plan by 2030 have been achieved through the market-driven closure of hundreds of coal plants.

The Biden administra­tion has no intention of reviving the Clean Power Plan, one reason the solicitor general, Elizabeth Prelogar, the administra­tion’s top supreme court lawyer, argues the court should dismiss the case.

Some of the nation’s largest electric utilities, serving 40 million people, are supporting the Biden administra­tion, as are prominent businesses including Apple, Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Tesla. A decision is expected by late June.

 ?? EPA authority. Photograph: Brian Snyder/Reuters ?? Smoke rises from the stacks of the Harrison power station in Haywood, West Virginia. West Virginia is leading the states opposed to broad
EPA authority. Photograph: Brian Snyder/Reuters Smoke rises from the stacks of the Harrison power station in Haywood, West Virginia. West Virginia is leading the states opposed to broad

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