Have AP headline-writers got enough brains for this headline to be
tongue-in-cheek? Because...the word "fatuous" springs to mind, quickly
followed by "and stupid."

--J.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091208/ap_on_bi_ge/climate_epa

By H. JOSEF HEBERT and DINA CAPPIELLO, Associated Press Writers
â€" 5 mins ago

WASHINGTON â€" The Obama administration took a major step Monday toward
imposing the first federal limits on climate-changing pollution from cars,
power plants and factories, declaring there was compelling scientific
evidence that global warming from manmade greenhouse gases endangers
Americans' health.

The announcement by the Environmental Protection Agency was clearly timed to
build momentum toward an agreement at the international conference on
climate change that opened Monday in Copenhagen, Denmark. It signaled the
administration was prepared to push ahead for significant controls in the
U.S. if Congress doesn't act first on its own.

The price could be steep for both industry and consumers. The EPA finding
clears the way for rules that eventually could force the sale of more
fuel-efficient vehicles and require plants to install costly new equipment
â€" at a cost of billions or even many tens of billions of dollars â€" or
shift to other forms of energy.

No analysis has been conducted by the EPA on costs of such broad
regulations, although the agency put the price tag of its proposed
climate-related car rules at $60 billion, with an estimated benefit of $250
billion.

Energy prices for many Americans probably would rise, too â€" though
Monday's finding will have no immediate impact since regulations have yet to
be written. Supporters of separate legislation in Congress argue they could
craft measures that would mitigate some of those costs.

Environmentalists hailed the EPA announcement as a clear indication the
United States will take steps to attack climate change even if Congress
fails to act. And they welcomed the timing of the declaration, saying it
will help the Obama administration convince delegates at the international
climate talks that the U.S. is serious about addressing the problem. Obama
will address the conference next week.

But business groups said regulating carbon emissions through the EPA under
existing clean air law would put new economic burdens on manufacturers, cost
jobs and drive up energy prices.

"It will choke off growth by adding new mandates to virtually every major
construction and renovation project," declared Thomas Donohue, president of
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which in recent months has been particularly
critical of the EPA's attempt to address climate change.

The EPA signaled last April that it was inclined to view heat-trapping
pollution as a threat to public health and welfare and began to take public
comments for formal rulemaking. That marked a reversal from the Bush
administration, which had refused to issue the finding, despite a conclusion
by EPA scientists that it was warranted.

EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson said Monday, "There are no more excuses for
delaying," adding that the so-called endangerment analysis from global
warming had been under consideration at the agency for three years. After
the official finding, she said the agency is now "obligated to make
reasonable efforts to reduce greenhouse pollutants under the Clean Air Act."

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said President Barack Obama "still
believes the best way to move forward is through the legislative process"
â€" something Obama has expressed on a number of occasions as he has pressed
Congress to shift the nation's energy priorities away from fossil fuels and
to reduce climate-changing pollution.

The EPA said scientific evidence clearly shows that greenhouse gases
"threaten the public health and welfare of the American people" and that the
pollutants â€" mainly carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels â€" should be
reduced, if not by Congress then by the agency responsible for enforcing air
pollution.

"These long-overdue findings cement 2009's place in history as the year when
the United States government began addressing the challenge of
greenhouse-gas pollution," said Jackson.

She rejected claims by climate skeptics that the science of global warming
remains in doubt, an argument given additional attention in recent weeks
with the disclosure through intercepted e-mails that a British scientist had
privately discussed ways to shield certain climate data from public
scrutiny.

"The vast body of evidence not only remains unassailable, it has grown even
stronger," said Jackson.

Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., a lead author of a climate bill before the Senate,
said of the finding: "This is a clear message to Copenhagen of the Obama
administration's commitments to address global climate change. ... The
message to Congress is crystal clear: Get moving."

Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., also a co-author, said, "The Senate has a duty
to act."

Business groups have strongly argued against tackling global warming through
the Clean Air Act, saying it is less flexible and more costly than the
cap-and-trade legislation being considered by Congress. Any regulations from
the EPA are certain to spawn lawsuits and a lengthy legal fights.

"Such regulations would be intrusive, inefficient and excessively costly,
chill job growth and delay business expansion," argued Jack Gerard,
president of the American Petroleum Institute, which also has been critical
of the climate legislation before Congress.

"The Clean Air Act can complement legislation," said Jackson. In fact, if
Congress were to cap greenhouse gas emissions, the EPA probably would be
given the responsibility of implementing the law.

The EPA's involvement in reducing climate-changing pollution, stems from a
2007 Supreme Court decision that declared that carbon dioxide and other
greenhouse gases are pollutants under the Clean Air Act. But the court said
the EPA would have to determine if these pollutants pose a danger to public
health and welfare before it could regulate them.

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