Los Angeles Times

McCarthy likely pick for EPA

She has been chief of the environmen­tal agency’s clean-air division since 2009.

- By Neela Banerjee

She has headed the federal environmen­tal agency’s clean-air division since 2009.

WASHINGTON — President Obama is expected by environmen­tal advocates to name Gina McCarthy, chief of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s air pollution arm, to head the agency.

The nomination of McCarthy, 58, who has served as head of the EPA’s clean-air division since 2009, could come as early as next week, officials of three environmen­tal groups said. Her boss, Lisa Jackson, left the administra­tor’s post Thursday.

McCarthy’s nomination is likely to draw fire from congressio­nal Republican­s. Over the last four years, they have attacked the EPA’s new regulation­s to cut air pollution, including emissions of greenhouse gases, as job-killing government overreach.

Obama’s choice of McCarthy also would signal that he is poised to make good on the more aggressive rhetoric he has used lately about the urgency of addressing climate change, environmen­talists said.

During his State of the Union address Tuesday, Obama departed from his past cautiousne­ss to make a moral case for tackling climate change. He challenged Congress to cut greenhouse gas emissions, but said he would use his authority if it failed to take action.

“If he were to pick Gina, it means he really means it,” said Jody Freeman, a Harvard law professor and former White House counselor for energy and climate change who worked with McCarthy from 2009 to 2010.

“I think she is focused like a laser beam on being a smart and effective regulator. She’s not interested in anything that’s not practical, and she understand­s perfectly the president’s agenda,” Freeman said.

The White House declined to comment on the possibilit­y of a McCarthy nomination.

“The EPA air administra­tor is well situated to lead the agency, if only because some of the most costly and widesweepi­ng decisions come from the air office,” said Scott Segal, a lawyer with Bracewell & Giuliani, a Houston law firm that often represents energy companies.

“That said, Gina McCarthy is engaging, effective and willing to listen to the regulated community — even if we don’t always agree with her final rules,” he said.

A Boston native, McCarthy served under four Massachuse­tts governors before being picked by former Gov. Mitt Romney as one of his top environmen­tal staffers there. But she left shortly afterward to serve as commission­er of Connecticu­t’s environmen­tal protection department from 2004 to 2009, where she helped implement a regional scheme to trade carbon credits to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from power plants.

McCarthy began her tenure with the Obama administra­tion’s EPA after the Supreme Court issued a landmark decision enabling the agency to regulate emissions of carbon dioxide, the main driver of climate change.

By May 2009, McCarthy’s office of air and radiation had hammered out a plan with the White House, the auto industry, states like California, environmen­talists and the United Auto Workers union to boost fuel efficiency considerab­ly in passenger vehicles from 2012 to 2016.

In 2011, the EPA rolled out a second phase of standards that would increase average fuel economy to 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025.

Under McCarthy, the air office issued unpreceden­ted rules to curtail emissions of mercury and carbon dioxide from new power plants. Her unit’s work stirred the ire of many in industry and their state and congressio­nal allies, who argued that the rules were too onerous.

That led to many appearance­s by McCarthy at often testy congressio­nal hearings, solid preparatio­n for the EPA administra­tor in light of the aggressive agenda that Obama said he would now pursue. Most of her office’s regulation­s withstood many legal challenges. But a long-awaited rule to cut smog-forming ozone was scuttled by the president himself in 2011.

The second-term EPA will have to make final the rules on carbon emissions from new power plants, and it faces demands from environmen­talists to issue similar standards for existing plants, the biggest emitters of greenhouse gases in the U.S. neela.banerjee@latimes.com

 ?? Associated Press ?? Jack Sauer
Associated Press Jack Sauer

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