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Regulation on horizon for carbon ... with or without congressional action

Federal curbs on emissions of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas blamed as a principal cause of climate change, are quickly becoming a reality. It may be just a matter of which government branch gets there first: legislative, executive— or both.

In December, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), part of the executive branch, declared that six key greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide, are endangering public health and welfare. Emissions from motor vehicles of four of those greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide, are also said to contribute to dangerous air pollution under this “endangerment finding.”

“This action puts a ‘foot in the door’ for the EPA to promulgate sweeping new regulations that could impose strict limits on carbon emissions from power plants, driving up electric bills,” warns Glenn English, CEO of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association (NRECA), which represents the interests of the nation’s 900- plus consumer-owned-andgoverned electric cooperatives.

The concern is that with carbon dioxide emissions from vehicles falling under federal Clean Air Act regulation, other emitters of carbon dioxide— fossil fuel-fired power plants included—may also soon be subject to additional EPA oversight.

“The Clean Air Act as written was never designed to deal with carbon, and it would be awkward at best and probably a disaster at worst,” English adds.

Electric cooperatives believe that any controls on carbon dioxide should be established by Congress, where the impact of these proposals can have a full public debate. Unfortunately, a climate change bill passed by the U.S. House last summer (H.R. 2454) and another reported by the U.S. Senate Environment and Public Works Committee in November (S. 1733) include unachievable goals and timelines for reducing carbon dioxide emissions, inadequate technology development incentives and no guarantee that electric bills will remain affordable. Current proposals will unfairly penalize consumers in fossil fuel-dependent states by saddling them with higher bills to essentially subsidize and lower electric bills for those in other regions.

What’s more, Senate leaders have admitted that climate change legislation has stalled and will likely be picked up sometime in the spring. This legislative logjam makes it all the more important for cooperatives and consumers to pay careful attention to the EPA’s current efforts.

English insists that any climate change legislation should protect consumers and preempt use of the federal Clean Air Act and any other existing laws. Otherwise, utilities and businesses could be burdened with the task of trying to comply with more than one set of regulations.

“Regulation of carbon dioxide as a pollutant will occur with or without congressional input,” English explains. “But Congress must not simply add new legislation on top of old regulations. Any climate change bill should become the road map—the single strategy—for reducing carbon dioxide emissions at federal, state and local levels.

"By staying engaged in the process, electric cooperatives can have a measurable impact on the outcome.”

Electric cooperatives are fighting to ensure that any climate change policy goals adopted are fair, affordable and achievable.

To make your voice heard in this debate, join NRECA’s Our Energy, Our Future™ grassroots awareness campaign.

Log on to North Central Electric Cooperative’s Web site at www.ncelc.org and click on the Our Energy, Our Future button to send a message to our Ohio senators and representatives. To date, more than 600,000 of your fellow co-op consumers across the country have already done so, including 28,000 from Ohio.

At North Central, nearly 950 members have weighed in on the climate change issue through the Our Energy, Our Future campaign.