I/II.
http://thehill.com/policy/energy-environment/250145-three-lines-of-attack-against-obamas-climate-rule

Three lines of attack against Obama’s climate change rule

By Timothy Cama - 08/04/15 06:01 AM EDT
Opponents of the Obama administration’s sweeping new standards for
power plant emissions have identified three avenues of attack, as they
formulate a strategy to beat back the central pillar of the
president’s climate change initiative.

States, industry groups and congressional Republicans are vowing an
all-out resistance campaign aimed at weakening, delaying or altogether
blocking the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) new carbon
limits.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who has urged states
to defy the rule, vowed Monday to do “everything I can to fight” the
rule.

“These regulations would likely mean fewer jobs, shuttered power
plants and higher electricity costs for families and businesses,” he
said in a floor speech. “I will not sit by while the White House takes
aim at the lifeblood of our state’s economy.”

That means going through bureaucratic channels — the National Mining
Association struck first, lodging a formal request Monday for a stay
of the rule before Obama unveiled it during an event at the White
House — as well as through legislative maneuvering and legal assaults
at both the state and federal levels.

And if all else fails, conservatives say, Obama’s successor could
unwind the regulations, if a Republican wins the White House next
year.

But the Obama administration and its allies are confident that the
rule will survive all of those attacks, maintaining that opponents
have a high bar to overturn it.

“It’s a rule that’s enforced within the Clean Air Act, which has been
litigated against by coal-burning utilities for decades, and they’ve
largely been unsuccessful,” said Michael Brune, executive director of
the Sierra Club.

“So we’re very confident that this is a rule that will be defended
successfully and enforced successfully,” he continued.

The top threats to the rule come from each branch of government: The
federal courts, Congress and, potentially, the Oval Office.

Legal challenges

The courts represent a key threat to the regulations. They have the
power to decide whether the Obama administration overstepped, and
could invalidate parts of the rule, or strike it down in its entirety.

A number of conservative states’ attorneys general have already
pledged to file lawsuits in federal court, including West Virginia,
Texas and Arkansas. They’ll join Murray Energy Corporation and likely
numerous other energy companies, business interests and states who
stand to face increased costs, decreased business or other problems
from the carbon limits.

The ultimate test of the court challenges, which are almost certain to
reach the Supreme Court in the coming years, will be whether the
climate rule aligns with the Clean Air Act and with the Constitution.

“This rule represents the most far-reaching energy regulation in this
nation’s history, drawn up by radical bureaucrats and based upon an
obscure, rarely used provision of the Clean Air Act,” West Virginia
Attorney General Patrick Morrisey said in a Monday statement. “We
intend to challenge it in court vigorously.”

He and his allies will have to wait until the rule is formally
published in the Federal Register to file lawsuits, which will likely
happen in the coming weeks.

The arguments generally fall into three categories: The rule
unconstitutionally usurps state power, the Clean Air Act prohibits
carbon regulations on power plants that are already regulated for
other pollutants and the EPA cannot regulate activities in the states
that are outside of the power plants themselves.

The EPA, however, boasts a successful record in the courts in recent
years, including the Supreme Court, which has granted the agency wide
latitude to enforce environmental rules under the Obama
administration.

And Richard Revesz, director of the Institute for Policy Integrity at
New York University, predicted none of the arguments against the power
plant regulations would stand.

“Those arguments are entirely without merit,” he said.

Congressional attacks

McConnell and other Republican leaders have pledged to do everything
in their power to block regulations their party has assailed as a
major front in the Obama administration’s “war on coal.”

The Senate Committee on Environment & Public Works will meet Wednesday
to vote on a bill sponsored by Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) to
overturn the regulations and make it very difficult for the EPA to
rewrite them.


McConnell also put language into the Senate’s appropriations bill for
the EPA that would effectively block the rule by starving it of
funding for implementation.

“These aren’t the only legislative options Congress can consider. We
can pursue other avenues, like [Congressional Review Act] resolutions
and further appropriations riders, as these regulations are published
and as they wind their way through the courts,” McConnell said.

The Congressional Review Act provides an expedited avenue for
overturning regulations, but they are still subject to presidential
veto, which would be difficult for critics of the rule to override.

House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) also promised to fight the rules.
The House passed a bill last month sponsored by Rep. Ed Whitfield
(R-Ky.) to significantly weaken and delay them.

But since Republicans do not have a filibuster-proof majority in the
Senate and Obama is still president, Congress has little power to act.

“Do I think McConnell and Boehner will put their leadership power
behind a Congressional Review Act challenge as soon as possible? Sure,
I totally suspect that,” said Will Yeatman, a senior fellow at the
Competitive Enterprise Institute. “But that’s more of a show.”

Yeatman questioned whether GOP leaders would go so far as to threaten
a government shutdown over the rules. “I don’t see that happening,” he
said.

A Republican president

All of the major Democratic candidates for president have vowed to
uphold and enforce the rule, but a GOP win in 2016 could represent
opponents’ best shot of killing the regulations.

Every Republican running for president who has weighed in on the issue
has sharply criticized President Obama’s rule, signaling that they
would likely move to overturn or weaken it.

“President Obama’s plan should be called the Costly Power Plan because
it will cost hard-working Americans jobs and raise their energy
rates,” Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker said, making a play on the EPA’s
Clean Power Plan name for the rule.

“It will be like a buzzsaw on the nation's economy,” he said. “I will
stand up for American workers and stop the Costly Power Plan.”


Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), another White House hopeful, said in a
statement: “The President’s lawless and radical attempt to destabilize
the Nation’s energy system is flatly unconstitutional and—unless it is
invalidated by Congress, struck down by the courts, or rescinded by
the next Administration—will cause Americans’ electricity costs to
skyrocket at a time when we can least afford it.”

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush said the Obama administration does not
have the power to impose the rules.

“I believe it’s unconstitutional, and, I think, in a relatively short
period of time, the courts will determine that as well,” Bush said at
a Sunday event.

The next president will have a lot of power over the rule. States do
not even have to start submitting their plans until September 2016,
and can delay them for a variety of reasons.

“This is wholly the next president’s issue,” said Yeatman. “This is a
discretionary regime, and whoever’s in charge has a great deal of
leeway to tailor any aspect of it.”

II.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/04/us/politics/5-questions-about-obamas-climate-change-plan.html?_r=0

5 Questions About Obama’s Climate Change Plan
By CORAL DAVENPORTAUG. 3, 2015

President Obama on Monday unveiled the final version of his Clean
Power Plan, a set of Environmental Protection Agency regulations that,
if implemented, would represent the strongest action ever taken by the
United States to combat climate change.

*How can the president take this action without Congress’s approval?*

Mr. Obama is using the authority of an existing law — the Clean Air
Act, enacted in 1970 — to issue the regulations. That law says that
the Environmental Protection Agency must regulate any pollutant that
is deemed a danger to human health and well-being. The Supreme Court
upheld the agency’s finding that carbon dioxide in large amounts did
qualify as a dangerous pollutant, since it contributes to climate
change, providing the Obama administration with both the legal
authority and the legal obligation to regulate carbon dioxide
emissions.

*What does the plan do?*

The plan is divided into three components. One is an E.P.A. regulation
that would require a 32 percent overall reduction in greenhouse gas
emitted by existing power plants from 2005 levels by 2030. The rule
will probably lead to the closing of hundreds of coal-fired power
plants.

The second regulation would require power plants built in the future
to produce about half the rate of the pollution now produced by
current power plants. That rule would effectively ensure that no new
coal plants are built in the United States. The plan then assigns
every state a target for reducing its emissions and requires them to
come up with a draft plan for how to do it by 2016 and a final plan by
2018.

*Why is the plan so contentious?*

Historically, when the E.P.A. puts forth regulations on smokestack
pollution, it simply prescribes specific steps for electric utilities
to take to adapt existing plants and factories to produce less
pollution. In this case, the agency has given states the flexibility
to do whatever they want to reduce pollution, and the result could
radically transform the way the United States gets its energy. In the
process, the plan could effectively end domestic demand for coal.

*What are opponents of the plan going to do?*

Attorneys general from states that oppose the plan are coming together
in a lawsuit to argue that it represents too broad an interpretation
of the Clean Air Act. Their legal challenge is expected to reach the
Supreme Court around 2017, which will then have to decide whether to
uphold the plan or strike it down.

*Will the plan stop global warming?*

Not on its own, but experts say that if the plan is combined with
similar action from other nations, plus further action by the next
president, it could level off emissions and prevent some of the worst
effects of global warming.

CORAL DAVENPORT

Correction: August 4, 2015
An earlier version of this article misstated the year by which an
E.P.A. regulation would require a 32 percent overall reduction in
greenhouse gas emitted by existing power plants from 2005 levels. it
is 2030, not 2025.
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Peace Is Doable

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