REVOLT! 25 States Sue EPA To Defeat Obama’s Global Warming
Agenda
(Daily Caller) – Twenty-five states are suing the Obama
administration in the hopes of defeating what’s been called one of the most
“far-reaching energy regulations” in American history: the so-called Clean
Power Plan. “The Clean Power Plan is one of the most far-reaching energy
regulations in this nation’s history,” West Virginia Attorney General Patrick
Morrisey, a Republican, said in a statement announcing the massive legal
challenge. “West Virginia is proud to be leading the charge against this Administration’s
blatant and unprecedented attack on coal,” Morrisey said. The legal assault
comes Friday, the same day the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is
publishing the Clean Power Plan (CPP) in the Federal Register — opening it up
to legal challenges. Coal companies and other states are expected to sue the
EPA as well.
States argues CPP is
essentially a federal takeover of state resource and energy policy because it
forces a shift away from coal regardless of a state’s own plans. CPP is also
being challenged because it regulates power plants already covered by another
section of the Clean Air Act.
“As Attorney General,
I have a responsibility to protect the lives of millions of working families,
the elderly and the poor, from such illegal and unconscionable Federal
Government actions,” Morrisey said. “It’s the people who can afford it least
who are going to be affected the most.”
This is the second
major legal effort against CPP in the last year. A legal challenge by the
states and a coal company was dismissed by a federal court earlier
this year because CPP had not yet been finalized. Now that the rule is
finished, however, states believe they can mount a more successful legal
challenge.
CPP aims to cut U.S.
power plant emissions 32 percent by 2030 by forcing states to write plans to
reduce emissions from the energy sector. The rule will essentially force states
to shutter coal-fired power plants and use more natural gas and green energy to
get electricity.
The EPA argues the
rule will not completely eliminate coal use, and that coal will still be an
important part of America’s power supply for years to come. But states that
rely on coal for the vast majority of their electricity argue the rule will
massively increase energy prices and require billions of dollars in new grid
investments.
West Virginia, for
example, is not only the largest coal-producing state east of the Mississippi
River, but also relies on coal power for nearly 96 percent of its
electricity generation. To comply with CPP, the state will have to
shutter more coal mines and plants.
The other 23 states in
the lawsuit are in a similar situation. Many of them rely on coal for most of
their electricity needs or have large coal mining sectors. Some have both, like
West Virginia.
Texas, one of the
states challenging the EPA, recently found CPP (combined with EPA’s
regional haze rule) could force 4,000 megawatts of coal-fired power capacity to
retire which “could pose challenges for maintaining grid reliability.”
The Electric
Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), the state’s grid
regulator, found that “energy costs for customers may increase by up
to 16% by 2030 due to the CPP alone” and that’s without taking into account
“the associated costs of transmission upgrades, higher natural gas prices caused
by increased gas demand, procurement of additional ancillary services, and
other costs associated with the retirement or decreased operation of coal-fired
capacity.” “Consideration of
these factors would result in even higher energy costs for customers,” ERCOT
found.
While states line up
to challenge CPP, environmentalists argue it’s necessary if the U.S. is going
to convince the rest of the world it’s serious about tackling global warming.
“The Clean Power Plan
is on solid legal footing, and will provide huge climate protection and public
health benefits for American families and communities, cutting power plant
carbon pollution and saving thousands of lives each year,” David Doniger, a
lobbyist at the Natural Resources Defense Council, said in a statement.
“A dirty-energy
alliance of coal companies, old-school utilities and their allies will rush to
the courthouse with lawsuits stoked with hot rhetoric about its supposedly dire
impacts,” Doniger said. “Don’t believe a word of it. The Clean Power Plan will
go forward and protect our future.”
http://dailycaller.com/2015/10/23/coalition-of-24-states-sues-epa-to-defeat-obamas-global-warming-agenda/
http://www.teaparty.org/revolt-25-states-sues-epa-defeat-obamas-global-warming-agenda-126265/
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