Trump
moves decisively to wipe out Obama’s climate-change record
28
March, 2017
President
Trump on Tuesday took the most significant step yet in obliterating
his predecessor’s environmental record, instructing federal
regulators to rewrite key rules curbing U.S. carbon emissions.
The
sweeping executive order — which the president signed with great
fanfare in the Environmental Protection Agency’s Map Room — also
seeks to lift a moratorium on federal coal leasing and remove the
requirement that federal officials consider the impact of climate
change when making decisions.
The
order sends an unmistakable signal that just as President Barack
Obama sought to weave climate considerations into every aspect of the
federal government, Trump is hoping to rip that approach out by its
roots. The president did not utter the words “climate change”
once, instead emphasizing that the move would spur job creation in
the fossil fuel industry.
“Our
administration is putting an end to the war on coal,” he said,
accompanied onstage by more than a dozen coal miners, Vice President
Pence and three Cabinet members. “We’re ending the theft of
American prosperity, and rebuilding our beloved country.”
Some
of the measures could take years to implement and are unlikely to
alter broader economic trends that are shifting the nation’s
electricity mix from coal-fired generation to natural gas and
renewables. The order is silent on whether the United States should
withdraw from the 2015 Paris climate agreement, under which it has
pledged to cut its greenhouse gas emissions between 26 and 28 percent
by 2025 compared to 2005 levels, because the administration remains
divided on that question.
The
order comes after several moves by Trump to roll back Obama-era
restrictions on mining, drilling and coal- and gas-burning
operations. In his first two months as president, Trump has nullified
a regulation barring surface-mining companies from polluting
waterways and set aside a new accounting system that would have
compelled coal companies and other energy firms to pay more in
federal royalties.
The
administration also has announced it will reconsider stricter
fuel-efficiency standards for cars and light trucks and has approved
two major oil pipelines, Dakota Access and Keystone XL, that Obama
had halted.
[As
Trump halts federal action on climate change, cities and states push
on]
Accelerating
fossil-fuel production on federal lands and sidelining climate
considerations could lead to higher emissions of the greenhouse gases
driving climate change and complicate a global effort to curb the
world’s carbon output. But Trump has repeatedly questioned whether
climate change is underway and emphasized that he is determined to
deliver for the voters in coal country who helped him win the Oval
Office.
The
president thanked the miners onstage twice during the ceremony, and
as they gathered around him when he signed the executive order, he
looked up and remarked, “You know what it says, right? You’re
going back to work.”
U.S.
coal jobs, which number about 75,000, have been declining for
decades. A senior administration official who briefed reporters
Monday evening did not predict how many jobs might be spurred by this
shift in policy.
Still,
Sen. James M. Inhofe (R-Okla.) and other administration supporters
said the change in policy would have a tangible impact on the
economy. “This order is a clear sign to the country that Trump is
serious about unleashing this country’s energy dominance,” Inhofe
said in a statement.
Legal
fight possible
The
centerpiece of the new presidential directive, telling the
Environmental Protection Agency to begin rewriting the 2015
regulation that limits greenhouse-gas emissions from existing power
plants, will trigger a laborious rulemaking process and a possible
legal fight.
The
agency must first get permission from the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the D.C. Circuit, where the rule is tied up in litigation, to revisit
the matter. Then, agency officials will have to justify reaching the
opposite conclusion of the Obama EPA, which argued it was technically
feasible and legally warranted to reduce carbon pollution by about
one-third by 2030, compared with 2005 levels.
“So,
for the president, even if he would like to revoke the Clean Power
Plan, he doesn’t have legal authority to do that,” said Jeffrey
Holmstead, a partner at the Bracewell law firm who opposes the
Obama-era rule. Holmstead, who headed the EPA’s air and radiation
office under President George W. Bush, said he thinks the agency can
justify reversing the regulation. But “they have to justify why
they have changed,” he added.
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While
environmental groups decried Trump’s move, mining officials
welcomed it as an important course correction in federal energy
policy.
“This
rule was an unlawful attempt to radically transform the nation’s
power grid, destroying valuable energy assets and leaving our economy
more vulnerable to rising power prices — all for an insignificant
environmental benefit,” said Hal Quinn, president and chief
executive of the National Mining Association.
Environmentalists
vowed to fight the executive order in court and press ahead with
their goals on the state level.
David
Doniger, director of the Natural Resources Defense Council’s
climate and clean-air program, said unwinding the Clean Power Plan
will not happen quickly, no matter what the president wants. “Tearing
the rules down require going through the same process it took to
build them up,” Doniger said. “We will make them face the music
at every step.”
Christopher
Field, a professor at Stanford University’s Wood Institute for the
Environment, said in an email that the directive carries long-term
risks, rather than immediate ones. “Some are risks from eroding the
position of U.S. companies in the clean energy sector,” Field said.
“Others are from the loss of irreplaceable natural heritage that is
put in jeopardy by ill-conceived policies.”
The
president will also instruct the Interior Department to rewrite a
2015 rule, currently stayed in court, that imposes restrictions on
hydraulic fracturing on federal and tribal lands. The directive will
also make it easier to flare methane in oil and gas operations on
federal land, by triggering the review of a rule the Interior
Department finalized in November.
More
immediate actions
Other
aspects of the executive order can take effect immediately, though it
is unclear how quickly they will translate into greater coal
extraction. One section overturns a 2016 White House directive to
consider climate change when agencies conduct reviews under the
National Environmental Policy Act, a sweeping law that informed any
federal decisions that have a significant environmental impact.
Another
provision instructs Interior’s Bureau of Land Management to lift a
freeze on federal coal leasing. That moratorium has been in effect
since December 2015.
Tom
Sanzillo, director of finance for the Institute for Energy Economics
and Financial Analysis, said in an interview that the move “becomes
a largely politically symbolic measure for right now” because
other, lower-carbon sources of energy are out-competing coal. He
noted that U.S. coal consumption has declined 27 percent since 2005,
from 1.02 billion tons to 739 million tons in 2016, its lowest level
in nearly four decades.
Does
the Trump administration believe in climate change? Play Video3:19
President
Trump and many of his top aides have expressed skepticism about
climate change, while others say human activity is to blame for
global warming. So what's the administration's real position? (Peter
Stevenson/The Washington Post)
“They’re
not going to reverse the fundamental economic law here,” Sanzillo
said. “There’s no market signal that’s telling them they should
be mining more coal.”
Still,
regulatory relief could make some coal firms, nearly 50 of which have
filed for bankruptcy since 2012, somewhat more economically viable.
Some of the sector’s biggest companies — including Arch Coal,
Peabody Energy and Alpha Natural Resources — are just now emerging
from bankruptcy protection.
Ethan
Zindler, head of U.S. research at Bloomberg New Energy Finance, said
in an email that solar and wind are competitive with coal in some
parts of the country and that natural gas ranks as the lowest-cost
source of electricity generation overall. The sector that could
suffer the greatest hit from the elimination of the Clean Power Plan
is nuclear energy, which provides about a fifth of U.S. businesses’
and households’ power.
“Many
of the 100 or so U.S. plants are aging, and approximately a third are
economically uncompetitive today,” Zindler said. Without stricter
federal emissions limits, he added, “there may be little to stop
the retirement of these plants in coming years and their replacement
with a combination of gas/wind/solar.”
National
Rural Electric Cooperative Association CEO Jim Matheson, whose group
challenged the Clean Power Plan in federal court, said in an
interview that he does not anticipate many of his members will start
building new coal-fired plants. But for those who have already
invested heavily in keeping their coal plants operating, he said, “It
has given them much greater flexibility to maintain more
reasonably-priced and affordable power for our consumers.”
Separately,
Trump has instructed federal officials to abandon the practice of
factoring in the impact of climate change — what is dubbed “the
social cost of carbon” — in their policymaking decisions. That
calculus, which is currently set at $36 per ton of carbon dioxide,
aims to capture the negative consequences of allowing greenhouse-gas
emissions to continue to rise. But some conservatives have criticized
it as too sweeping.
Federal
officials will return to the traditional cost-benefit analysis
outlined in a 2003 Office of Management and Budget guidance, which
appears to put the cost associated with carbon emissions at zero.
As
Trump seeks to scale back federal limits on greenhouse gas emissions,
states and cities are likely to take on a larger role in charting the
course forward.
An
analysis by the Rhodium Group, an economic consulting firm, found
that Trump’s forthcoming executive order would slow the country’s
shift away from carbon-emitting sources of energy. It found after
Trump’s action, the United States would be 14 percent below its
2005 emissions levels by 2025, compared to 21 percent below that mark
had current Obama-era policies remained in place.
All
three West Coast governors and a handful of mayors issued a statement
within minutes of the order’s signing, vowing to press ahead with
their own policies to cut carbon emissions. In an interview,
California Gov. Jerry Brown (D), said his state would fight to
maintain strict carbon standards in court, and would participate in
U.N. climate talks to help foster further action overseas.
“ Gutting
the Clean Power Plan is a colossal mistake, and defies science
itself,” Brown said. “Erasing climate change may take place in
Donald Trump’s mind, but nowhere else.”
Tim
Profeta, who directs Duke University’s Nicholas Institute for
Environmental Policy Solutions, said regulators from more than
half-dozen states in the Southeast are now talking about how to chart
their own path forward. Having met for nearly three years, the group
stopped discussing how to comply with the Clean Power Plan after
November’s election, but it is still talking.
“We
are now talking about the evolution of the power sector in an
environment of uncertainty,” Profeta said in an interview. “We’re
seeing the beginning of states taking control of their destiny.”
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