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Politics : The Environmentalist Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: d[-_-]b who wrote (2721)10/4/2003 3:06:37 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 36918
 
And Arnie wants to ABOLISH THE CALIFORNIA EPA.....the ONE that LEADS THE WORLD and NATION in NOT putting up with corporate destruction of the state and country.....
States Plan Suit to Prod U.S. on Global Warming

October 4, 2003
By DANNY HAKIM



DETROIT, Oct. 3 - California plans to sue the Environmental
Protection Agency over the Bush administration's recent
decision that the agency lacked the authority to regulate
greenhouse gas emissions from tailpipes and other sources,
state regulators said on Friday.

Nine other states, including New York, Massachusetts and
Oregon, as well as environmental groups like the Sierra
Club and the Natural Resources Defense Council, are
expected to join the suit. The legal strategy, an effort to
prod federal action on global warming, sets up a battle
between the Bush administration and the states over policy
on climate change.

In California, the suit is also seen as an effort to stave
off challenges to the state's plan to regulate automotive
emissions of greenhouse gases.

"This issue is vital to the future of our state," Gov. Gray
Davis said in a statement. "It affects important resources
like our rich agricultural lands; Sierra snowpack; the
safety of our forests and our seaside communities."

Mark Merchant, a spokesman for the E.P.A., said: "It's
apparent that California is reading the Clean Air Act one
way and the E.P.A. is reading it another way. There's a
difference of opinion there, and California has decided to
ask the court to make a decision."

The move comes after suits filed by several states
challenging the Bush administration's loosening of
regulations over power plants.

Mr. Davis's administration announced on Friday that the
suit against the E.P.A. would come in a matter of days.
California and the other states and environmental groups
planned to make a joint announcement within a few weeks,
but the Davis administration moved up its timetable because
of the impending recall election, people briefed on the
planned lawsuit said.

The suit stems from the E.P.A.'s decision, announced in
late August, that it did not have the authority to regulate
emissions of carbon dioxide and other gases linked to
global warming trends. Many scientists, but not all, say
such trends are leading to a variety of health and
environmental problems.

The E.P.A. decision came in response to a petition from
environmental groups to take action on climate change and
was a reversal of the Clinton administration's policy on
the matter. Environmental groups and regulators in several
states say the Clean Air Act does give the federal
government such authority.

"If the United States is ever going to regulate greenhouse
gases, it will start with a victory in this lawsuit," said
David Bookbinder, Washington legal director for the Sierra
Club.

The Clean Air Act directs the government to regulate air
pollutants, including "any physical, chemical, biological
radioactive substance or matter which is emitted into or
otherwise enters ambient air" if they "may reasonably be
anticipated to endanger public health or welfare." Climate
change is included as a possible harm to public welfare.

The case could resolve whether greenhouse gases will be
classified as air pollutants.

The nine other states expected to join the suit are New
York, Washington, Oregon, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Maine,
Illinois, Vermont and Connecticut, officials in California
said Friday.

Because of its history of smog problems, California has
long been the most aggressive state on matters of air
policy. Because the state's air policies predated the Clean
Air Act, it has the authority to set its own standards, and
other states can pick California's more aggressive rules
over the federal government's.

Last year, California's Legislature became the first and,
so far, only legislative body in the nation to enact a
measure aimed at curbing global warming emissions from
cars.

The legislation put the state at odds with the auto
industry, which is widely expected to sue the state.
Environmental groups are concerned that the E.P.A.'s ruling
could be used as a legal argument to undercut California's
authority to regulate greenhouse gases.

"California has the dual motive of wanting the federal
government to do the job and to push back on the attempt of
the Bush administration to interfere with California's
attempt to do its job," said David D. Doniger, a policy
director at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

Mr. Merchant said the E.P.A. action did not necessarily
preclude California from acting on its own.

The auto industry has yet to file suit because the
specifics of the measure itself have not been written. The
ultimate tenor of the regulation depends on who occupies
the governor's office, because the chairman of the state's
Air Resources Board is an appointee of the governor.

Arnold Schwarzenegger, the leading Republican candidate
whose enthusiasm for Hummers has unsettled
environmentalists, supports the legislation.

"California's landmark legislation to cut greenhouse gases
is now law," a statement on his Web site says. "I will work
to implement it and to win the expected challenges in court
along the way."

nytimes.com

CC