Out in the coal: New EPA regs for power plants could mean higher bills
By Eric Boehm | Watchdog.org
MINNEAPOLIS – In November 2010, President Obama stood before reporters in the White House briefing room and offered a frank description of his administration’s chances of getting heavy-duty environmental regulations through Congress.
That was in the final days before Republicans seized control of the U.S. House in Obama’s first mid-term. Unable to get greenhouse gas emissions rules through a Democratic Congress, Obama acknowledged it would be far less likely in the soon-to-be divided government.
THE YEAR AFTER THE YEAR AFTER: After four years of divided government and little movement on environmental initiatives, Obama’s EPA is set to do what Congress will not.
It’s now the year after the year after, but the situation is the same.
Next week, the administration will see what it can accomplish without congressional approval. The Environmental Protection Agency plans to announce new policies designed to cut carbon emissions at American power plants.
The announcement is scheduled Monday, but some details have already slipped into the media. The new regulations will vary by state, but each state will have to hit targets for carbon emissions — rather than previous EPA regulations that have set limits for specific facilities but never for an entire state or the whole nation — in a two-step process intended to reduce carbon emissions by 25 percent by 2030, the Washington Post reported.
Those mandatory reductions will be a heavy drag on the economy, according to a report issued this week by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and several other groups representing energy companies.
“They are working on really the most signification EPA regulation, or any regulation, in American history. Certainly, it’s EPA’s costliest regulation,” Matt LeTourneau, director of communications for the U.S. Chamber, told Watchdog Radio on Wednesday.
The new report uses a combination of sources in an attempt to determine what the Obama administration might have up its sleeve. The chamber relied on a comprehensive emissions plan published by the National Resources Defense Council, which is working closely with the EPA to craft the new rules, and took into account international agreements the administration has made, such as the Copenhagen Accords.
If their prognostications are true, the chamber expects the new EPA regulations to cost 200,000 jobs per year and as much as $51 billion in annual GDP. The changes would also cause electricity prices to skyrocket for individual consumers and businesses.
COAL NO MORE: New EPA regulations might force existing coal power plants, like the Silver Lake Power Plant in Rochester, MN, to shut down.
The high costs are due primarily to the fact the new regulations would target not only new power plants but also require existing plants are retrofitted or closed in favor of new forms of energy.
LeTourneau said nearly all coal-fired plants would be shut down, and even some natural gas power plants could face the axe.
Even with all those cutbacks, global emissions would be reduced by just 1.8 percent, the chamber says, because most of the growth in emissions is coming from places such as China and India.
Reynolds said the EPA had gathered testimony from hundreds of groups, including many that are members of the U.S. Chamber, and promised more meetings after the new rules are announced. He said the chamber’s report had significant holes because the group was working off assumptions and other sources, not the actual EPA regulations.
“The chamber’s report is nothing more than irresponsible speculation based on guesses of what our draft proposal will be. Just to be clear — it’s not out yet. I strongly suggest that folks read the proposal before they cry the sky is falling.”
If the new regulations are as onerous as business groups believe, and if they are adopted into law without congressional approval, expect lengthy court battles over the issue. The chamber was one of several groups to sue over the Affordable Care Act — which did have congressional approval — showing they are not afraid to take on the administration in court to delay or defeat costly new rules.
It will likely be years before any new carbon emissions standards for power plants are a reality, but punch and counter-punch from the chamber and the EPA shows that the battle over messaging has already begun.
Boehm can be reached at EBoehm@Watchdog.org and follow @WatchdogOrg on Twitter for more.