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Issue 8
27th
April 2009
C&I Magazine
EPA to regulate greenhouse gases?
Patrick Walter,
27/04/2009
In a surprise move, the US
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) has declared that six
greenhouse gases pose a potential
threat to public health. The decision
represents a sharp break with
George Bush’s presidency, which was
reluctant to publicly acknowledge
climate change as a serious problem.
It is likely to add to growing
momentum to legislate and control
greenhouse gas emissions.
‘This finding confirms that
greenhouse gas pollution is a
serious problem now and for future
generations,’ says recent Barack
Obama appointee, Lisa Jackson, EPA
Administrator (
C&I 2009,
2, 5). ‘This
pollution problem has a solution
– one that will create millions of
green jobs and end our country’s
dependence on foreign oil.’
Environmental groups welcomed
the move, but industry responded
cautiously. A bill to control
greenhouse gas emissions using,
amongst other things a cap and
trade programme (
C&I 2009,
7, 5),
is already making its way through
Congress, although there are doubts about its effectiveness (see page 6).
The announcement comes
on the back of a scientific review
ordered by the US Supreme
Court in 2007. The EPA’s review
identified six greenhouse gases
as posing a danger to human
health – carbon dioxide, methane,
nitrous oxide, hydrofluorocarbons,
perfluorocarbons and sulphur
hexafluoride. The analysis suggests
that climate change can have
effects on human health that are
felt rapidly, such as an increase in
ground level ozone, which affects
those with respiratory illnesses
such as asthma. Other longer term hazards to human health include
drought, flooding, sea level rises
and more intense storms. The EPA
has previously put forward evidence,
during the last administration, that
greenhouse gases are hazardous to
people’s health, but the results were
ignored.
The EPA’s findings could mean
that these six gases will be regulated
under the Clean Air Act. Nevertheless,
before that can happen there is a two
month public consultation period.
However, American Chemical
Council (ACC) president and ceo
Cal Dooley, described the Clean Air
Act as the wrong vehicle to enact
EPA to regulate greenhouse gases?
climate change legislation. ‘Given
the national implications of carbon
dioxide regulation by EPA and the
interdependent nature of climate
and energy issues, climate policy
should be discussed and developed
in Congress in tandem with energy
policy.’
The ACC reiterated the importance
of the chemical industry in providing
solutions to climate change, such as
solar panels, wind turbines, lithiumion
batteries and building insulation.
Republican Senator Lisa
Murkowski, ranking member of
the Senate Committee on Energy
and Natural Resources called the
Clean Air Act a ‘blunt instrument’.
She added that at a time of global
economic weakness it would be an
additional burden to US businesses.
In a statement, the American
Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF) said
it was ‘deeply concerned’ about the
impact of the EPA’s decision. The
AFBF warned that many farmers
could be forced out of business
by moves to regulate greenhouse
gases produced by farming, such as
methane or nitrous oxide.