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Doc’s Prescription: Supreme Court limits EPA authority to restrict greenhouse gas emissions

On June 30, the U.S. Supreme Court in West Virginia v. Environmental Protection Agency ruled that the EPA overstepped its authority in restricting greenhouse gas emissions. The Court ruled that Congress, not the EPA, has the power to create a broad system of cap-and-trade regulations to limit emissions from existing power plants in a bid to transition away from coal to renewable energy sources.

Ernest “Doc” Werlin
Ernest “Doc” Werlin

Fossil fuel-fired power plants are the second-largest source of pollution in the U.S. behind transportation. The U.S. is the second-largest producer of greenhouse gases per capita after China.

The Court’s decision was a major setback for the Biden administration’s agenda to combat climate change. Their goal was to zero out carbon emissions from power plants by 2035 and cut the country’s emissions in half by 2100.

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President Biden called the court’s ruling “a devastating decision that aims to take our country backwards. I have directed my legal team to find ways that we can, under federal law, continue protecting Americans from harmful pollution, including pollution that causes climate change.” Heretofore, the Biden Administration was hopeful to use a number of government agencies, not just the EPA, to limit global warming. Gautam Hans, a law professor at Vanderbilt University, wrote, “Now, it is going to be much harder for those agency rules to survive judicial scrutiny.”

Lights illuminate a coal mine at twilight on Jan. 13 in Kemmerer, Wyo. With the nearby coal-fired Naughton Powerplant being decommissioned in 2025, the fate of the coal mine and its workers is uncertain. More than 500 days into his presidency, Joe Biden’s hope for saving the Earth from the most devastating effects of climate change may not be dead. But it’s not far from it after a Supreme Court ruling not only limited the Environmental Protection Agency’s ability to regulate pollution by power plants, but also suggests the court is poised to block other efforts to limit the climate-wrecking fumes emitted by oil, gas and coal.
Lights illuminate a coal mine at twilight on Jan. 13 in Kemmerer, Wyo. With the nearby coal-fired Naughton Powerplant being decommissioned in 2025, the fate of the coal mine and its workers is uncertain. More than 500 days into his presidency, Joe Biden’s hope for saving the Earth from the most devastating effects of climate change may not be dead. But it’s not far from it after a Supreme Court ruling not only limited the Environmental Protection Agency’s ability to regulate pollution by power plants, but also suggests the court is poised to block other efforts to limit the climate-wrecking fumes emitted by oil, gas and coal.

Chief Justice John Roberts wrote that “a regulatory agency must have clear statutory authorization from Congress to take certain action and rely on its general agency authority.” The Court’s decision “is a major questions case,” meaning Congress has to authorize regulatory agencies to make certain decisions. This is the first time the “major questions doctrine” was used in the majority’s opinion to justify a ruling.

In dissent, Justice Elena Kagan wrote, “The Court majority does not have a clue about how to address climate change … it appoints itself, instead of Congress or the expert agency … the decision-maker on climate policy. I cannot think of many things more frightening.”

Unfortunately, major environmental laws have not been amended in decades. As a consequence, agencies such as the EPA are relegated to working with old statutes to accomplish its objectives.

The EPA believed that “Congress tasked it, and it alone, with balancing the many vital considerations of national policy, implicated in how Americans will get their energy.”