Legislation
designed to address global warming failed in Congress this year,
largely due to concerns about its high costs and adverse impact on an
already weakening economy. The congressional debate will likely resume
in 2009, as legislators try again to balance the environmental and
economic considerations on this complex issue. Meanwhile, the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), pursuant to a 2007 Supreme Court
decision, has initiated steps toward bypassing the legislative process
and regulating greenhouse gas emissions under the Clean Air Act.
The
EPA's Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR) is nothing less than
the most costly, complicated, and unworkable regulatory scheme ever
proposed. Under ANPR, nearly every product, business, and building
that uses fossil fuels could face requirements that border on the
impossible. The overall cost of this agenda would likely exceed that of
the legislation rejected by Congress, reaching well into the
trillions of dollars while destroying millions of jobs in the
manufacturing sector.[1] The ANPR is clearly not in the best interests of Americans, and the EPA
should not proceed to a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and final rule
based upon it.
Climate Legislation
Concern that
carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are gradually warming the
planet has emerged as the major environmental issue of the day, and
certainly the most hyped one. Carbon dioxide is a naturally occurring
component of the air, but is also the ubiquitous and unavoidable
by-product of fossil fuel combustion, which currently provides 85
percent of America's energy. Thus, any effort to substantially curtail
such emissions would have extremely costly and disruptive impacts on
the economy and on living standards.
For this reason, the
federal government has been cautious about embarking on mandatory
carbon reductions. In 1997, the U.S. Senate unanimously resolved to
reject any international climate change treaty that unduly burdened the
U.S. economy or failed to engage all major emitting nations, such as
China and India. Although the Kyoto Protocol was signed by the U.S.
later that year, neither President Bill Clinton nor President George W.
Bush ever submitted the treaty to the Senate for the required
ratification. This has shown itself to be a wise move: Many, if not
most, of the European and other developed nations that ratified the
treaty are failing to reduce their emissions due to the prohibitive
costs in doing so.
Legislatively, Congress has thus far rejected
every attempt to control carbon dioxide emissions. Chief among the
legislative proposals in 2008 was S. 2191, the America's Climate
Security Act of 2007, originally sponsored by Senators Joe Lieberman
(I-CT) and John Warner (R-VA). This was a so-called cap-and-trade bill
that would set a limit on the emissions of greenhouse gases, especially
carbon dioxide from the combustion of coal, oil, and natural gas. Each
power plant, factory, refinery, or other regulated entity would have
been allocated rights to emit limited amounts of carbon dioxide and
other greenhouse gases. Those entities that reduced their emissions
below their annual allotment could sell their excess allowances to
those that did not--the trade part of cap and trade. The bill would
start with a mandated emissions freeze at 2005 levels in 2012, and end
with a 70 percent reduction by 2050.
In effect, this bill would
have acted like a tax on energy, driving up its cost so that businesses
and consumers are forced to use less.
Last June, America's
Climate Security Act was withdrawn by its Senate supporters after only
three days of debate. A Heritage Foundation analysis detailed the
costs of the bill, which included a 29 percent increase in the price
of gasoline, net job losses well into the hundreds of thousands, and an
overall reduction in gross domestic product of $1.7 to $4.8 trillion by
2030.[2]
At the time of the debate, gasoline was approaching $4 per gallon for
the first time in history, and signs of a slowing economy were
beginning to emerge. Economically speaking, the bill was one of the
last items on the agenda that Americans wanted, and its Senate sponsors
recognized that. Beyond the costs, the bill would have--even assuming
the worst case scenarios of future warming-- likely reduced the earth's
future temperature by an amount too small to verify.[3]
The
debate is sure to resume in 2009, but the economic concerns about such
measures remain. Though gasoline prices may be lower next year than the
last time climate legislation came to a vote, unemployment will likely
be higher as will unease about the overall state of the economy. Thus,
the legislative effort to place costly restrictions on energy still
faces an economic headwind. Notwithstanding the state of the economy,
such measures will always fail any reasonable cost-benefit test given
their high costs and environmental benefits that are marginal at best.
Regulation as an Alternative to Legislation
While
proponents of greenhouse gas restrictions have lobbied for additional
legislation, they have also tried to force the EPA to regulate carbon
dioxide as a pollutant under existing law. In 1999, an environmental
activist group sued the EPA over its refusal to restrict such emissions
from motor vehicles under the Clean Air Act. The case eventually
reached the Supreme Court, which in April 2007 ruled in a five-to-four
decision against the EPA.
The decision did not require the EPA
to change its position and begin regulating carbon dioxide from
vehicle exhaust; it only required the agency to demonstrate that
whatever it chooses to do complies with the requirements of the Clean
Air Act. Nonetheless, the agency's detailed ANPR, published on July 30,
2008, appears to treat such regulation as a foregone conclusion.
Although the ANPR is preliminary in nature, the level of detail (the
ANPR and supporting documentation exceed 18,000 pages) suggests that
the EPA has already decided to impose regulations that are
unprecedented in their cost, complexity, and reach.
The reasons
for Congress's reluctance to enact global warming legislation are
every bit as relevant to the debate over whether or not the EPA should
achieve the same results through regulations. This is especially true
given the many shortcomings of the Clean Air Act as an instrument for
regulating carbon dioxide emissions--for which the statute was not
intended. In effect, the measures detailed in the ANPR would require
action at least as costly as comparable cap-and-trade bills, and
likely more so given the added difficulty of doing it in a much more
convoluted fashion.
Regulating Vehicles--and Almost Everything Else
Because
no technology exists to date that offers the possibility to filter out
carbon dioxide emissions from motor vehicle exhaust, the only way to
reduce emissions is to use less fuel. In the ANPR, the EPA contemplates
higher gas mileage standards for motor vehicles beyond those already
scheduled to be imposed in accordance with the 2007 Energy
Independence and Security Act. The EPA also discusses strict
requirements for everything from airplanes to ships to trains to
lawnmowers, all of which could be subject to new design specifications
and usage limitations as well as fuel economy standards, as described
in painstaking detail in the ANPR.
Beyond regulating anything
that is mobile and uses energy, the ANPR also contemplates targeting
anything that is immobile and uses energy--commercial and
non-commercial buildings, large and small businesses, and farms. Under
the Clean Air Act, once carbon dioxide emissions from motor vehicles
are regulated, emissions from stationary sources must also be
controlled under the New Source Review (NSR) and other Clean Air Act
programs because they apply to all pollutants subject to regulation
anywhere else in the statute. Even if the agency tries to rein in the
reach of its regulation, it will almost certainly face litigation by
environmentalists opposing such restraint.
Given that the
existing threshold for regulation under the Clean Air Act--250 tons of
emissions per year, and in some cases as little as 100 tons per
year--is easily met in the case of carbon dioxide emissions, the agency
could impose new and onerous NSR requirements heretofore limited to
major industrial facilities. Other Clean Air Act programs, such as the
Title V permitting program and the hazardous-air-pollutants program,
have even lower thresholds, creating a regulatory maze both
restrictive and redundant.
Most pollutants regulated under the
Clean Air Act are trace compounds like ozone or mercury that are
typically measured in parts per billion, so these threshold levels are
sensible to distinguish de minimis contributors from
significant ones. But carbon dioxide is not a trace compound, thus,
existing Clean Air Act thresholds are ill suited. Background levels
alone account for 275 parts per million, and even relatively small
usage of fossil fuels could reach these thresholds. Thus, even the
kitchen in a restaurant, the heating system in an apartment or office
building, or the activities associated with running a farm could cause
these and other entities--potentially more than a million buildings,
200,000 manufacturing operations, and 20,000 farms[4]--to
face substantial and unprecedented requirements. Churches, hospitals,
schools, and government buildings could also be subjected to these
requirements.
This type of industrial-strength EPA red tape that imposes an average of $125,000 in costs and takes 866 hours to complete[5]
could now be imposed, for the first time, on a million or more entities
beyond the large power plants and factories that have traditionally
already been regulated in this manner. Even more significant than the
administrative costs is that all of these entities would be required to
install costly technologies and operate under certain restrictions, as
determined by EPA bureaucrats.
In sum, a host of complicated and
redundant regulations could be applied to nearly every product, nearly
every business, and nearly every building in America that uses fossil
fuels. The ANPR, if finalized in anything near its current form, would
create an environmental regulatory scheme more costly and intrusive
than all the others combined.
The Costs of the ANPR
Either
through legislation or regulation, efforts to reduce fossil fuel
emissions will impose costs throughout the economy. For purposes of
this analysis of the ANPR, the Heritage Foundation ignores the up-front
administrative and compliance costs of imposing such an unprecedented
crackdown both for regulated entities and for federal and state
regulators. Heritage analysts instead assume the unlikely scenario of
successful ANPR implementation and focus only on the cost of the rules
in the form of higher energy costs.
The impact on the overall
economy, as measured by gross domestic product (GDP), is substantial.
The cumulative GDP losses for 2010 to 2029 approach $7 trillion.
Single-year losses exceed $600 billion in 2029, more than $5,000 per
household. (See Chart 1.) Job losses are expected to exceed 800,000 in
some years, and exceed at least 500,000 from 2015 through 2026. (See
Chart 2). Note that these are net job losses, after any jobs created by
compliance with the regulations--so-called green jobs--are taken into
account. Hardest-hit are manufacturing jobs, with losses approaching 3
million. (See Chart 3). Particularly vulnerable are jobs in durable
manufacturing (28 percent job losses), machinery manufacturing (57
percent), textiles (27.6 percent), electrical equipment and appliances
(22 percent), paper (36 percent), and plastics and rubber products (54
percent). It should be noted that since the EPA rule is unilateral and
few other nations are likely to follow the U.S. lead, many of these
manufacturing jobs will be outsourced overseas.



The
job losses or shifts to lower paying jobs are substantial, leading to
declines in disposable income of $145 billion by 2015--more than $1,000
per household.
Conclusion
Virtually every concern
heightened by the economic downturn, especially job losses, would be
exacerbated under the ANPR. As with cap-and-trade legislation, the
EPA's suggested rulemaking would be poison to an already sick economy.
But even in the best of economic times, this policy would likely end
them. The estimated costs--close to $7 trillion dollars and 3 million
manufacturing jobs lost--are staggering. So is the sweep of
regulations that could severely affect nearly every major energy-using
product from cars to lawnmowers, and a million or more businesses and
buildings of all types. And all of this sacrifice is in order to make,
at best, a minuscule contribution to an overstated environmental
threat. Congress has wisely resisted implementing anything this costly
and impractical. The fact that unelected and unaccountable EPA
bureaucrats are trying to do the opposite is all the more objectionable.
Ben Lieberman
is Senior Policy Analyst in Energy and the Environment in the Thomas A.
Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation.
ENDNOTES: [4]Portia
M. E. Mills, Mark P. Mills, "A Regulatory Burden: The Compliance
Dimension of Regulation CO2 as a Pollutant," U.S. Chamber of Commerce,
September 2008, p. 3.
[5]Carrie
Wheeler, "Information Collection Request for Prevention of Significant
Deterioration and Nonattainment New Source Review," U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, no date.