Last week the Bush administration announced new rules that would effectively
scrap "new source review," a crucial component of our current system of air pollution
control. This action, which not incidentally will be worth billions to some major
campaign contributors, comes as no surprise to anyone who pays attention to which
way the wind is blowing (from west to east, mainly — that is, states that vote
Democratic are conveniently downwind).
But this isn't just a policy change, it's an omen. I hope I'm wrong, but it's
likely that last week's announcement marks the beginning of a new era of environmental
degradation.
Some background: The origin of new source review lies in a big policy mistake
30 years ago. The original Clean Air Act imposed strict rules on new sources of
pollution, but it grandfathered existing power plants, refineries and so on. The
idea was that over time, as old facilities closed down, strict rules would become
the norm.
What happened instead was predictable: In order to keep their exemptions,
polluting industries poured money into existing facilities rather than build new
ones. In an attempt to close this loophole, the Environmental Protection Agency
began requiring companies that invested in existing facilities to demonstrate
that they were merely doing maintenance, rather than creating new capacity that
was supposed to face stricter regulation.
Everyone agrees that this was an awkward fix. It was a recipe for endless
legal battles between companies and the E.P.A., and in some cases it deterred
investments that would actually have made the air cleaner. Most experts also agree
on the solution: a so-called cap-and-trade system, in which existing facilities
are granted emissions licenses that they can sell to others if they succeed in
reducing their own pollution. This would end the litigation, and provide businesses
with broad-based incentives to clean the air.
But in the early years of the Clean Air Act, environmentalists didn't trust
market solutions enough to endorse cap-and-trade. By the time they changed their
minds, it was too late. Polluters had lost interest in improving the way the emission-control
system works, figuring that in a political scene increasingly dominated both by
money and by conservative ideology they could buy themselves the right to spew
at will. And so it has turned out.
True, the Bush administration says that it favors a cap-and-trade system;
it has even introduced legislation to that effect. I could explain the defects
of the Clear Skies Initiative — its conspicuous failure to deal with greenhouse
gases, the glacial pace at which it proposes to reduce emissions of those pollutants
it does control (many estimates say that it would actually allow more pollution
than would a strict enforcement of current law). But it's a moot point: Last week's
announcement is, I believe, a signal that even Clear Skies isn't going to happen.
Aside from cynicism (which has been an almost infallible guide to administration
environmental policy so far), how do I reach that conclusion?
Here's one reason: If a cap-and-trade system is just around the corner, why
not wait and introduce the whole system at once? As the E.P.A. press release last
week correctly declares, "under the Clear Skies Initiative, NSR [new source review]
would no longer be necessary." But then why did polluters so badly want an immediate
end to such review before a new system could be put in place? And why was the
administration willing to accept lots of bad press for a clearly anti-environmental
move, if it was seriously planning to impose new controls in the next year or
two? The obvious answer is that both the polluters and top administration officials
know that Clear Skies is, figuratively and literally, a smokescreen.
Here's another reason: As long as new source review was in effect, the regulated
industries had an interest in fundamental reform; a sensible cap-and-trade system
could have both reduced pollution and increased profits. But now the polluters
have gotten what they want; they would be hurt, not helped, by new restrictions.
There's no longer any basis for a deal that clears the air.
Administration officials still insist, of course, that they plan to proceed
with clean air measures. And it's possible that they will eventually do the right
thing. But don't hold your breath waiting. In fact, it might be a good idea to
breathe deeply now, while you still can.
Copyright The New York Times Company
###