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US Senate upholds Bush aid to air polluters
By Patrick Martin
25 January 2003
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In the first policy test for the Bush administration since
the US Senate reverted to Republican control, the upper house
of Congress voted to implement new air pollution regulations that
allow corporations to run coal-burning factories and power plants
without installing anti-pollution devices.
The Senate voted by 50-46 against a proposal to delay the Bush
administrations regulatory changes for six months while
the environmental impact was studied by the National Academy of
Sciences. A subsequent 51-45 vote endorsed the regulations. Both
measures were introduced as amendments to a $390 billion appropriations
bill that provides the funding for a vast array of government
programs through September 30.
The Clean Air Act, passed three decades ago, requires new industrial
and power plants to have up-to-date pollution controls, such as
scrubbers. Older plants, built before 1977, are required to add
such controls when they are significantly upgraded. The key to
the enforcement of this provision is the determination of when
such an upgrade goes beyond routine maintenance, making an old
plant a new source of pollutants. This is defined
by federal regulations issued by the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
Less than three weeks after the election, the Bush administration
announced that it was revising the EPA regulations to relax the
standard for new sources of pollution, making it possible
for utilities and other large corporate polluters to make extensive
upgrades in older plants without the expense of installing anti-pollution
equipment.
At least one of the rules actually permits corporations to
install equipment that increases the quantity of pollutants released
into the air. It is the first time since the passage of the Clean
Air Act in 1970 that controls on atmospheric emissions have been
loosened rather than made tighter.
The decision was hailed by utility and energy industry lobbyists,
but challenged by the state attorneys general of nine Northeastern
states which, because of their location and weather patterns,
receive a disproportionate share of the acid rain, soot and smog
from heavy industry in the Midwest. Connecticut, New York, New
Jersey, Maryland, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire
and Maine joined in filing a lawsuit against the new EPA rules.
This regional split contributed to the closeness of the vote
in the Senate, as five Republican senators from New England backed
the plan to delay the EPA rules. Their defection was offset by
five southern Democrats, four of them from Arkansas and Louisiana,
states dominated by coal, oil and gas interests, who backed the
Bush administrations position.
The green light for more corporate smog is only one of a barrage
of administrative and regulatory actions announced by the Bush
administration since the 2002 election, weakening anti-pollution
laws and permitting corporate interests to boost their profits
by ravaging the environment.
Logging in national forests
Last November, the administration announced it would overturn
regulations for managing national forests issued by the Clinton
administration late in 2000, in favor of new regulations drafted
in consultation with the timber industry. The new rules drastically
shorten the process of environmental review before national forests
can be opened to logging, drilling or other commercial activities.
The new rules reduce the number of scientific reports required
and limit the opportunities for public comment on plans for commercial
development. Form letters and preprinted postcardsfrequently
distributed by environmental groups campaigning to preserve wilderness
areaswould be discarded unread. Individual managers of national
forests would have greater license to ignore such environmental
concerns as the preservation of diverse plant and animal species.
The American Forest and Paper Association (AFPA), a trade group
for the forest products industry, hailed the proposed rules, saying
they will restore common sense to the forest management
process. The undersecretary of agriculture who supervises
the Forest Service, Mark E. Rey, was vice president of the AFPA
from 1992 to 1994 and worked for a decade as an industry lobbyist.
The new rules for expediting permits for logging and grazing
effectively repeal the 1976 National Forest Management Act, which
centralized the process of environmental review and largely removed
the power to permit logging from individual forest managers, who
were more susceptible to the pressure and blandishments of timber
interests. It applies to 192 million acres of public lands in
155 national forests in 44 states.
As with many of its most reactionary policies, the Bush administration
sought to depict the plan for ravaging the forests as its oppositea
plan to preserve the forests through careful management. Secretary
of Agriculture Ann Veneman blamed environmental restrictions on
removing undergrowth for the toll of death and destruction from
last summers forest fires. But the expedited process will
apply not only to small trees and brush, but also to logging in
such areas as Sequoia National Forest, which has centuries-old
trees.
Waste runoff in the water supply
On December 16, the EPA issued new rules significantly weakening
proposed restrictions on the runoff of livestock waste from factory
farms that raise millions of chickens, pigs and cows in metal
sheds, producing 220 billion gallons of liquefied manure last
year. This runoff is a major source of contamination of drinking
water.
The new regulation was only issued because of a court-imposed
deadline, and is far looser than the draft prepared under the
Clinton administration, cutting in half the number of companies
affected and making the whole process self-policed: i.e., allowing
agribusiness to decide how massive the level of pollutants flowing
into rivers and lakes will be.
The regulation also exempts agribusiness corporations from
liability for illegal dumping of pollutants by subcontractors
and suppliers. The Bush EPA itself estimates that the livestock
and poultry industries will incur only $335 million in annual
costs from the new regulations, compared to $980 million in costs
imposed by the original Clinton administration proposal. While
these industries reap the profit, the health costs will be borne
by the American people.
Other anti-environmental measures announced in the last several
weeks include:
* Formally withdrawing a Clinton administration rule that required
federal oversight of state cleanup efforts at impaired water
bodies, terminology which designates 300,000 miles of rivers
and coastlines and 5 million acres of lakes. Big corporate polluters
complained that federal involvement would lead to increased cleanup
costs.
* Issuing new rules making it easier for states and local governments
to build new roads and open up territory to mining and other extractive
activity on federal lands, by claiming rights of way
based on ancient trails and dirt tracks long out of use.
* Allowing the trading of pollution credits by
companies that must comply with the Clean Water Act, modeled on
a similar market-based system that permits companies to buy the
right to violate the Clean Air Act.
* Exempting up to 20 percent of US wetlands from the protection
of the Clean Water Act, by excluding ponds and wetlands that are
restricted to a single state and do not flow into interstate rivers
or lakes.
* Opening up to oil gas and drilling nine million acres of
the Alaska North Slope, part of the National Petroleum Reserve
that is located near, but outside, the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge. The proposal by the Bureau of Land Management is the largest
single offering of land for drilling in the history of the American
Arctic.
See Also:
US: New attacks on Medicare and Medicaid
[22 January 2003]
Bush administration
moves to gut Clean Air standards
[5 April 2002]
Bush announces new
global warming plan: a Valentines Day gift for energy corporations
[23 February 2002]
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