The Denver Post

EPA defies climate warnings, gives coal plants a reprieve

- By Ellen Knickmeyer

WASHINGTON» Despite scientists’ increasing­ly urgent warnings, the Trump administra­tion ordered a sweeping about-face Wednesday on Obama-era efforts to fight climate change, easing restrictio­ns on coalfired power plants in a move it predicted would revitalize America’s sagging coal industry.

As miners in hard hats and coal-country lawmakers applauded, Environmen­tal Protection Agency chief Andrew Wheeler signed a

measure that scraps one of President Barack Obama’s key initiative­s to rein in fossil fuel emissions. The replacemen­t rule gives states more leeway in deciding whether to require plants to make limited efficiency upgrades.

“While some in Washington are trying to reverse climate action and ensure more pollutants end up in our air and our lungs, in Colorado we are committed to protecting clean air and ensuring a transition to renewable energy,” Gov. Jared Polis said.

Wheeler said he expects more coal plants to open as a result. But one state, New York, immediatel­y said it would go to court to challenge the action, and more lawsuits are likely.

The EPA move follows pledges by Donald Trump, as a candidate and as president, to rescue the U.S. coal industry, which saw nearrecord numbers of plant closings last year in the face of competitio­n from cheaper natural gas and renewables. It’s the latest and one of the biggest of dozens of environmen­tal regulatory rollbacks by his administra­tion.

It came despite scientists’ cautions that the world must cut fossil fuel emissions to stave off the worst of global warming and the EPA’s own analysis that the new rule would result in the deaths of an extra 300 to 1,500 people each year by 2030, owing to additional air pollution from the power grid.

“Americans want reliable energy that they can afford,” Wheeler declared at the signing ceremony, with White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney alongside to underscore Trump’s approval.

There’s no denying “fossil fuels will continue to be an important part of the mix,” Wheeler said.

Lawmakers and industry representa­tives from coal states blamed federal regulation, not the market, for the decades-long trend of declining U.S. coal use, and said Wednesday’s act would stave off more coal plant closings.

“We’re not ready for renewable energy ... so we need coal,” declared Rep. David McKinley, a West Virginia Republican.

But rather than a sensible economic move, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, DCalif., described the change as a “dirty power scam” and “a stunning giveaway to big polluters.” She called climate change “the existentia­l threat of our time” and said the administra­tion was ignoring scientific studies and yielding to special interests.

Obama’s 2015 Clean Power Plan is currently stayed by the Supreme Court while challenges play out from more than two dozen states that contend it exceeded authority under the federal Clean Air Act.

Environmen­tal advocates and Obama-era EPA officials involved in drafting the now-repealed plan said Trump’s replacemen­t rule will do little to cut climatedam­aging emissions from coal-fired power plants, at a time when polls show Americans are increasing­ly paying attention to global warming.

“I can’t think of a single rule that would do more to set back the effort to do what we need to do to address the critical threat of climate change,” said Joe Goffman, who helped draft the repealed Clean Power Plan.

The Obama plan aimed at encouragin­g what had been market-driven changes in the nation’s electrical grid, pushing coal-fired power plants out and prodding utilities to rely more on natural gas, solar, wind and other lower- or no-carbon fuels.

Burning of fossil fuels for electricit­y, transporta­tion and heat is the main human source of heat-trapping carbon emissions.

Trump has rejected scientific warnings on climate change, including a dire report this year from scientists at more than a dozen federal agencies noting that global warming from fossil fuels “presents growing challenges to human health and quality of life.”

Administra­tion officials argue climate science is imperfect, and that it’s not clear climate change would have as great an impact as forecast.

The Trump administra­tion also is proposing to roll back an Obama-era mileage rule requiring tougher mileage standards for cars and light trucks. Environmen­tal groups promise court challenges there, too.

An Associated Press analysis Tuesday of federal air data showed U.S. progress on cleaning the air may be stagnating after decades of improvemen­t.

 ?? Associated Press file ?? A coal-fired power plant is silhouette­d against the morning sun in Glenrock, Wyo.
Associated Press file A coal-fired power plant is silhouette­d against the morning sun in Glenrock, Wyo.

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