The Heritage Foundation has issue a report analyzing the ten worst regulations of the year. One can
see the entire report at this link. There were two regulations that particularly interested me. There are the second and third of the ten worst. Below is an excerpt explaining these two regulations:
2. EPA Emissions Standards
The EPA in February finalized strict new emissions standards for coal- and oil-fired electric utilities.
The benefits are highly questionable, with the vast majority being
unrelated to the emissions targeted by the regulation. The costs,
however, are certain: an estimated $9.6 billion annually.
3. Fuel Efficiency Standards
In August, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, in tandem with the Environmental Protection Agency, finalized fuel efficiency standards for cars and light trucks
for model years 2017–2025. The rules require a whopping average fuel
economy of 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025. Sticker prices will jump by
hundreds of dollars.
Do you know what our city says about these regulations? Nashville loves them, so our Metro Council speaking on our behalf says. Below is the text of a resolution passed unanimously by our Metro Council on November 16th.
RESOLUTION NO. RS2012-478
A resolution supporting the reducing of greenhouse gas pollution under the Environmental Protection Agency Clean Air Act.
WHEREAS, the scientific community, most notably NASA, NOAA, and the IPCC support the following findings; and
WHEREAS, the decade from 2000 to 2010 was the warmest on record, and 2005 and 2010 tied for the hottest years on record; and
WHEREAS, the current level of CO2 in the atmosphere is approximately 392 parts per million (ppm); and
WHEREAS, one of the world’s leading climate
scientists, Dr. James Hansen, stated in 2008: “If humanity wishes to
preserve a planet similar to that on which civilization developed and to
which life on Earth is adapted, paleoclimate evidence and climate
change suggest that CO2 will need to be reduced from its current 392 ppm
to at most 350 ppm”; and
WHEREAS, the Environmental Protection Agency
determined that current and future greenhouse gas concentrations
endanger public health, and according to the Global Humanitarian Forum
climate change is already responsible every year for some 300,000
deaths, 325 million people seriously affected, and economic losses
worldwide of $125 billion; and
WHEREAS, extreme weather events, most notably
heat waves and precipitation extremes, are striking with increased
frequency, with deadly consequences for people and wildlife; in the
United States in 2011 alone, a record 14 weather and climate disasters
occurred, including droughts, heat waves, and floods, that cost at least
$1 billion each in damages and loss of human lives; and
WHEREAS, climate change is affecting food
security by negatively impacting the growth and yields of important
crops, and droughts, floods and changes in snowpack are altering water
supplies; and
WHEREAS, scientists have concluded that by 2100
as many as one in ten species may be on the verge of extinction due to
climate change; and
WHEREAS, the world’s land-based ice is rapidly
melting, threatening water supplies in many regions and raising sea
levels, and Arctic summer sea ice extent has decreased to about half
what it was several decades ago, with an accompanying drastic reduction
in sea-ice thickness and volume, which is severely jeopardizing
ice-dependent animals; and
WHEREAS, sea level is rising faster along the U.S. East Coast than it
has for at least 2,000 years, is accelerating in pace, and could rise by
one to two meters in this century, threatening millions of Americans
with severe flooding; and
WHEREAS, for four decades, the Clean Air Act has
protected the air we breathe through a proven, comprehensive, successful
system of pollution control that saves lives and creates economic
benefits exceeding its costs by many times; and
WHEREAS, with the Clean Air Act, air quality in
this country has improved significantly since 1970, despite major growth
both in our economy and industrial production; and
WHEREAS, between 1970 and 1990, the six main
pollutants covered by the Clean Air Act — particulate matter and
ground-level ozone (both of which contribute to smog and asthma), carbon
monoxide, lead, sulfur and nitrogen oxides (the pollutants that cause
acid rain) — were reduced by between 47 percent and 93 percent, and
airborne lead was virtually eliminated; and
WHEREAS, the Clean Air Act has produced economic benefits valued at $2 trillion or 30 times the cost of regulation; and
WHEREAS, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in
Massachusetts vs. EPA (2007) that greenhouse gases are “air pollutants”
as defined by the Clean Air Act and the Environmental Protection Agency
has the authority to regulate them; and
WHEREAS, The City of Nashville prides itself on
being a leader in the fight against climate change and for clean air
and, by creating the Mayor’s Office of Environment and Sustainability,
has shown its ability to be a green leader in the Southeast; and
WHEREAS, The City of Nashville strives to meet the goals set out by the Green Ribbon
Committee’s 2009 Summary Report, which addresses environmental and livability issues in Nashville.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT OF NASHVILLE AND DAVIDSON COUNTY:
Section 1. That the Metropolitan County Council
hereby goes on record as supporting the reduction of greenhouse gas
pollution under the Environmental Protection Agency Clean Air Act.
Section 2. The Council further goes on record as
noting that climate change is not an abstract problem for the future or
one that will only affect far-distant places, but rather climate change
is happening now, we are contributing to it, and the longer we wait to
act, the more we lose and the more difficult the problem will be to
solve.
Section 3. We, the Metropolitan County Council,
on behalf of the residents of Nashville, do hereby urge the
administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, Lisa P. Jackson,
and President Barack Obama to move swiftly to fully employ and enforce
the Clean Air Act to do our part to reduce carbon in our atmosphere to
no more than 350 parts per million.
Section 4. The Metropolitan Clerk is directed to
send a copy a copy of this Resolution to Lisa P. Jackson of the
Environmental Protection Agency and to President Barack Obama.
Section 5. This Resolution shall take effect
from and after its adoption, the welfare of The Metropolitan Government
of Nashville and Davidson County requiring it.
Sponsored by: Jason Holleman, Erica Gilmore,
Brady Banks, Burkley Allen, ,Lonnell Matthews, Sean McGuire, Bo
Mitchell, Davette Blalock.
The Council should admit they did not know what they were voting for when they passed the above resolution, should pass a resolution rescinding their previous support, should condemn the EPA's unauthorized power grab, and condemn job-killing and unrealistic EPA regulations.
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