Subscribe to daily environment news





 

Click for news Click for pictures
National Tree Day

Planet Ark Home


White House 'Pivotal' In Calif. Climate Case- Memo
Mail this story to a friend | Printer friendly version

US: May 21, 2008


WASHINGTON - Congressional Democrats on Monday said White House pressure may have influenced the Environmental Protection Agency to reject a bid by California to impose strict limits on emissions from new cars and trucks.


EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson rejected California's plan on Dec. 19, 2007, despite recommendations from agency staff to approve the tough limits, Democratic staff said in a memo based on five months of investigation.

Agency staff warned Johnson that rejecting the limits could prompt lawsuits that the agency would lose, according to the memo to members of the House (of Representatives) Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

The memo, written by staff for the Democratic majority on the committee, said documents and interviews with agency officials shows these officials unanimously recommended that California's request be granted.

Johnson initially favored doing so, at least in part, but "reversed his position after communications with officials in the White House." The state wanted the tougher emissions standards to help fight climate change.

"The record before this committee suggests that the White House played a pivotal role in the decision to reject the California petition, but it does not explain the basis for the White House intervention," the memo said.

To impose tougher pollution standards than the federal government's, California must get a so-called waiver from the EPA. Such waivers have customarily been granted.

But Johnson rejected California's request, saying its pollution problems did not merit special consideration.

California is leading a suit to reverse the EPA decision.


'BEST OF A BAD LOT'

Eighteen other states also favoured California's proposed greenhouse gas standards, which would have forced automakers to cut emissions by making vehicles much more fuel-efficient starting in 2009.

The memo quoted from briefing materials prepared for Johnson as he considered the waiver. When asked specifically to offer options that included turning the waiver down, agency lawyers did so, but offered a "caveat," the memo said.

"After review of the docket and precedent, we don't believe there are any good arguments against granting the waiver," the caveat read. "All of the arguments discussed here are likely to lose in court if we are sued. The arguments here are the best of a bad lot, going from most to least plausible."

Jonathan Schradar, an EPA spokesman, dismissed the memo as old news.

"I equate this to deciding whether to wear a red tie or a blue tie in the morning," Schradar said by telephone. "It doesn't make much difference until I put the tie on. To go through and suggest that maybe (Johnson) had a different opinion during the process -- none of that matters."

The White House Council on Environmental Quality also referred to Johnson's statements in denying the waiver.

The memo by the House oversight committee, chaired by California Democratic Rep. Henry Waxman, said "further investigation will be required to assess the legality of the White House role in the rejection of the California motor vehicle standards."

In the Senate, where climate change legislation is set for debate in June, Sen. Barbara Boxer, a California Democrat who chairs the Environment and Public Works Committee, called the administration's decision "indefensible."

(Editing by Alan Elsner)


Story by Deborah Zabarenko


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE



© 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
top

 
TODAY'S
ENVIRONMENT
NEWS

AUSTRALIA:
Australian "Hot Rocks" Offer 26,000 Yrs of Power

CHINA:
Dozens Taken to Hospital After China Gas Leak

CHINA:
Quake Hits Southwest China, No Reports of Casualties

CYPRUS:
Turkish Cypriots Plan Water Pipeline From Turkey

INTERNATIONAL:
FACTBOX - Plans for Tackling Climate, From US to China

JAPAN:
Magnitude 4.5 Earthquake Shakes Eastern Japan

JAPAN:
Honda Considers Exporting Home-Use Solar Panels

NIUE:
South Pacific Leaders Warned on Economy, Climate

NORWAY:
Iceland to Offer Offshore Oil and Gas Licenses

NORWAY:
UN Climate Talks Seek Quicker Pace, Plug 2050 Gaps

PHILIPPINES:
Typhoon Kills Four in Northern Philippines

UK:
This Year So Far Coolest For at Least 5 Years - WMO

UK:
Oil Companies Take a Punt on Offshore Ireland

US:
Grupo Mexico's Asarco Appeal Hinges on Technicality

US:
US Court Says States Can Lift Emission Monitor Bar

US:
NYC Mayor Calls for Wind Turbines Atop Skyscrapers

US:
Resilient Storm Fay Could Hit Florida a Third Time

US:
Hyundai Aims to Launch First US Hybrid in 2010



previous day


This site developed by Frontline, and managed by Planet Ark using RPM-NT.

Site designed by Jon Dee @ Planet Ark.

Radiant