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Climate change - While Congress sleeps

2013-07-01 11:21:38

Barack Obama offers stopgap measures to slow global warming

IN THE full glare of Washington s summer sunshine, Barack Obama unveiled what

he called a co-ordinated assault on a changing climate on June 25th. He

promised to deploy almost every green weapon at his disposal, from better

insulation in public buildings to loan guarantees for clean energy. To engage

the enemy as quickly as possible, he is relying solely on authority already

granted to him by Congress. Yet most of the munitions in his atmospheric

arsenal are less than fearsome and Congress, which could provide

reinforcements, prefers not to.

The centrepiece of Mr Obama s climate action plan is a directive to the

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to limit the amount of carbon dioxide

that power plants may produce. The EPA was already working on such a rule for

new plants; the president wants it to produce that by September 20th, and one

curbing emissions from existing plants a year from now. Since power plants spew

out almost 40% of America s greenhouse gases, and are not yet subject to any

restrictions, this order could in theory make a big dent in America s

contribution to global warming.

In addition, the president ordered the strengthening of fuel-economy standards

for lorries and buses, on top of the increases for all vehicles adopted in his

first term. He offered $8 billion in loan guarantees for the deployment of

technologies that make fossil fuels less harmful to the climate, such as carbon

capture. He promised to promote renewable power by encouraging the construction

of wind farms and solar arrays on federal lands, by requiring government

agencies to obtain more of their own power from such sources and by

streamlining permits for a more efficient electricity grid.

Mr Obama said he would tighten energy-efficiency standards for federal

buildings and try to get mortgage lenders to take more account of energy

efficiency in home sales. There was talk of curbing leaks of natural gas,

managing forests to trap more carbon and phasing out HFCs (chemicals used in

air-conditioners and fridges that are especially potent greenhouse gases).

Some thought Mr Obama would approve Keystone XL, a pipeline for carrying

Canadian oil to American refineries. Instead, he said the pipe could go ahead

only if it does not significantly exacerbate carbon pollution a high hurdle

for oil from tar sands.

All this is supposed to help fulfil the president s pledge to get America s

greenhouse-gas emissions to 17% below the level of 2005 by 2020. In fact,

America s emissions have been falling, thanks to the recession and widespread

switching from coal- to gas-fired power stations. But not fast enough: they are

only 7% below the level of 2005, and the administration estimates that they are

poised to start rising again.

Green groups say that Mr Obama s plan, if vigorously pursued, might propel

America most of the way to its target. But the president is less agitated than

they are about the need to reduce emissions from natural-gas drilling and

transport, for example. He gave no indication of the scale of cuts he would

like to see from existing power plants, the most important element of his plan.

And however exacting the EPA s rules are, drafting and implementing them will

be a long and uncertain process.

The EPA s authority over greenhouse gases stems from the Clean Air Act, which

was first passed in 1970 to combat smog. Under its terms, the agency must

propose standards for existing power plants, revise them after listening to

comments and then wait for each state to come up with an implementation plan,

which in turn will set compliance dates that may be several years in the

future. Mr Obama is thus likely to be out of office before the new standards

bring down emissions at all.

Moreover, even the relatively modest rules the agency has promulgated under the

act on less pervasive pollutants than carbon dioxide have sparked endless

lawsuits. This week, for example, the Supreme Court agreed to hear a challenge

to restrictions on ozone that drifts over state boundaries. There is great

uncertainty as to whether the relevant section of the act permits the EPA to

adopt trading schemes and other market-based mechanisms to spur cuts, or only

allows it to require particular technological fixes. And even if the rules

survive in court, a future administration could reverse them, as George W. Bush

s underlings did in 2005 with a Clinton-era ruling that mercury was an

especially dangerous pollutant to be regulated under a particular section of

the act.

If you want less of it, tax it

Mr Obama himself admits that it would be far better if Congress adopted a more

sweeping measure that, in effect, puts a uniform price on carbon from any

source. That would allow cuts to be achieved more cheaply and efficiently. But

all such proposals have run aground in Congress; the last big push, in 2009,

cost many Democrats their seats in the next year s mid-term elections.

Many House Republicans doubt that the planet is heating up at all. Others

question the expense and effectiveness of Mr Obama s plan. Almost all salivate

at the prospect of excoriating Democrats at next year s mid-terms for

throttling the economy with green tape. No wonder, then, that the most

impassioned part of Mr Obama s speech was when he called on supporters to

convince their neighbours that climate change is real, and to urge them to vote

accordingly.