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Supreme Court deals climate change fight a major blow in EPA ruling

The Brunner Island power plant in Pennsylvania
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The Brunner Island power plant in Pennsylvania

In a blow to the Biden administration鈥檚 efforts to address the warming caused by greenhouse gas emissions, the Supreme Court on Thursday ruled that the Environmental Protection Agency does not have the authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from existing power plants, a decision aimed at those power plants running on coal.

But the , authored by Chief Justice John Roberts and issued on the last day of the session, is also likely to have far broader impacts, not only on environmental regulation .

鈥淚 read it as having significant effects on statutory interpretation and administrative law going forward,鈥 said Katrina Kuh, Haub Distinguished Professor of Environmental Law at Pace University School of Law.

But she said it will likely have particular impacts on environmental law.

鈥淚t is a significant blow to efforts to use the Clean Air Act to control greenhouse gas emissions,鈥 she said.

While New England is down to a few highly polluting coal power plants, 海角换妻 still faces the effects of pollution from such plants to our west and the effects from climate change more broadly.

海角换妻 Attorney General William Tong, who has joined dozens of lawsuits and other actions aimed at fighting climate change, called the court action a major blow to federal efforts to fight it.

鈥淭his is a serious setback, but we cannot lose sight of what is at stake and what is urgently needed to fight the climate crisis,鈥 he said in a statement. 鈥淥utdated and expensive coal plants are causing enormous damage to our environment and economy, and we cannot let this decision stall our transition to clean, renewable, and truly affordable power. This is a radical opinion that signals a dramatic shift in the Court鈥檚 approach to long-settled precedent. I expect today鈥檚 decision is just the beginning of this Court鈥檚 efforts to undermine agency authority, not just within the EPA but across the executive branch.鈥

While the decision only ruled on the issue of regulating greenhouse gas emissions in existing fossil fuel power plants, its reasoning drew on something known as the 鈥渕ajor questions doctrine,鈥 which essentially says if an agency wants to regulate something that is not already in statute and that has a major economic or political impact, it needs to get specific authority from Congress.

鈥淚ts judgment, I think, is guided by what it thinks is a major political or economic controversy,鈥 Kuh said. 鈥淚 think the vast majority of Americans maybe aren鈥檛 too concerned about loss of profits by coal companies and are really concerned about climate change.鈥

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, calling the decision a 鈥渟enseless misstep鈥 that 鈥渟trait jackets our fight against the climate crisis,鈥 was equally critical of the the Court鈥檚 reasoning.

鈥淚ts supposed 鈥榤ajor questions鈥 doctrine is concocted from legal thin air 鈥 an outcome-driven bogus jurisprudential tenet. Once again, the Court鈥檚 misguided majority have shown that they are politicians with robes, pushing a far-right fringe agenda that they disclaimed as nominees before the American people,鈥 he said.

The Clean Air Act does not cite climate change or greenhouse gas emissions. The EPA and other agencies have long relied on what鈥檚 called the Chevron deference 鈥 a ruling from the court in 1984, considered a bedrock of administrative law, that gives agencies, not courts, the leeway to address certain issues that are not specifically cited in law as long as the agency鈥檚 interpretation is reasonable.

It has been especially useful for the EPA, using the rationale that its matters are so complex, detailed, technical, time-consuming and changeable due to the evolution of scientific knowledge that they should be left to the experts within the agency.

But the court鈥檚 ruling would essentially put the responsibility on Congress, which, among its many gridlocked areas, has been particularly gridlocked on matters relating to climate change.

鈥淏ottom line is federal environmental law is dead. Honestly, we鈥檝e reached the end of the road on federal environmental law, because we鈥檙e not going to get brand new environmental statutes in the foreseeable future,鈥 said Patrick Parenteau, professor emeritus of environmental law at Vermont Law School. 鈥淭he only thing you can hope is that the agencies can rely on their existing authority to deal with these new threats, like forever chemicals and other things.

鈥淪o we are really stuck in a terrible, terrible place in terms of federal environmental law.鈥

In a statement, Bradley Campbell, president of the New England-based Conservation Law Foundation, said the decision had hobbled EPA鈥檚 ability to reduce power plant pollution.

鈥淏y arbitrarily limiting EPA鈥檚 explicit and broad authority under the Clean Air Act to require the use of less-polluting systems, the Court has consigned millions of Americans to more illness, shorter lives, and greater poverty in an overheated climate, while giving itself nearly unlimited authority to invalidate protections and safeguards intended by Congress.鈥

The case, known as West Virginia v. EPA, stems from two carbon-reducing power plans that were never implemented. The first was the Clean Power Plan, devised in the Obama administration, which targeted emissions from coal plants. Courts had prevented that from going into effect.

The second was the Affordable Clean Energy Rule the Trump administration devised after repealing the Obama plan, though its greenhouse gas emission reductions were far less. That rule also was stopped by the courts, and it was surprising the court took up the West Virginia case at all, since effectively there was no plan and the Biden administration had indicated it was going to come up with its own plan, not go back to Obama鈥檚.

But the coal industry and more than a dozen states, including West Virginia, were already in court in support of the Trump plan at the time it was thrown out.

鈥淐apping carbon dioxide emissions at a level that will force a nationwide transition away from the use of coal to generate electricity may be a sensible 鈥榮olution to the crisis of the day,鈥欌 Roberts wrote. 鈥淏ut it is not plausible that Congress gave EPA the authority to adopt on its own such a regulatory scheme.鈥

In her dissent, Justice Elena Kagan wrote: 鈥淭oday, the Court strips the Environmental Protection Agency of the power Congress gave it to respond to 鈥榯he most pressing environmental challenge of our time.鈥欌 She cited the 2007 decision that established greenhouse gas emissions as pollutants that can endanger public health and therefore had to be regulated by EPA.

Gov. Ned Lamont also decried the ruling.

Lamont, who reiterated his commitment to reducing carbon pollution, called on federal lawmakers to act.

鈥淭he climate crisis requires a national strategy and federal inaction is unacceptable,鈥 Lamont said. 鈥淚 urge Congress to enact meaningful legislation to avert this crisis.鈥

In a lengthy statement, President Joe Biden called the court ruling 鈥渁nother devastating decision that aims to take our country backwards.鈥 He said he had already instructed his legal team to find ways to continue dealing with the climate crisis. 鈥淲e cannot and will not ignore the danger to public health and existential threat the climate crisis poses.鈥

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If that matters to you, now is the time to give. Join the 50,000+ members powering honest reporting and a more connected 鈥 and civil! 鈥 海角换妻.

SOMOS CONNECTICUT is an initiative from 海角换妻, the state鈥檚 local NPR and PBS station, to elevate Latino stories and expand programming that uplifts and informs our Latino communities. Visit CTPublic.org/latino for more stories and resources. For updates, sign up for the SOMOS CONNECTICUT newsletter at ctpublic.org/newsletters.

SOMOS CONNECTICUT es una iniciativa de 海角换妻, la emisora local de NPR y PBS del estado, que busca elevar nuestras historias latinas y expandir programaci贸n que alza y informa nuestras comunidades latinas locales. Visita CTPublic.org/latino para m谩s reportajes y recursos. Para noticias, suscr铆base a nuestro bolet铆n informativo en ctpublic.org/newsletters.

Fund the Facts

You just read trusted, local journalism that鈥檚 free for everyone, thanks to donors like you.

If that matters to you, now is the time to give. Join the 50,000+ members powering honest reporting and a more connected 鈥 and civil! 鈥 海角换妻.

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海角换妻鈥檚 journalism is made possible, in part by funding from Jeffrey Hoffman and Robert Jaeger.