Eight states and
the City of New York have filed the nation's first lawsuit
against private companies to require reductions in carbon
dioxide emissions. California, Connecticut, Iowa, New Jersey,
New York, Rhode Island, Vermont, Wisconsin and New York city
on July 21 sued American Electric Power Co., Columbus, Ohio;
Southern Co., Atlanta; Tennessee Valley Authority, Knoxville;
Xcel Energy Inc., Minneapolis, and Cinergy Corp., Cincinnati.
Together, they own or operate 174 fossil-fueled powerplants
in 20 states that emit about 650 million tons of CO2 per year.
The suit seeks to order the defendant companies to reduce
their emissions under the federal common law of public nuisance,
which provides a right of action to curb pollution emanating
from sources in other states. New York State Attorney General
Eliot Spitzer says CO2 reductions of 1% to 3% are achievable,
and that cuts at that level would not have a noticeable impact
on retail electricity rates.
"The solution isn't going to be switching to natural
gas," says Robert McIlvaine, principal of The McIlvaine
Co., Northfield, Ill., an air-pollution consultant. Gas is
promoted as clean-burning fuel, but North American production
is declining, and new incremental growth must come from liquefied
natural gas imported from overseas. The energy required to
liquefy, transport and vaporize the LNG adds 30% to the ostensible
emissions of greenhouse gas produced by combustion of the
regasified LNG, he notes, largely nullifying the advantage
of gas over coal. More likely, emissions will be reduced through
boiler modifications that allow gasified biomass and other
wastes to be injected for co-firing with coal. McIlvaine informally
estimates the cost of modifications at $3 billion, relatively
little considering that "AEP is spending $7 billion just
on air-pollution control equipment," he says.
Opponents blasted the effort. "If
Congress wanted the EPA to regulate CO2, it would pass legislation
requiring the EPA to regulate CO2," says Jeffrey Marks,
National Association of Manufacturers director of air quality.
"This is classic 'regulation by litigation,' trying to
substitute the inexpert views of one judge for decisions our
democratic society has already made through duly elected representatives,"
adds Quentin Riegel, NAM vice president for litigation.
"The (attorneys general) are
engaging in irresponsible political grandstanding," says
Myron Ebell, director of global warming and international
environmental policy at the Competitive Enterprise Institute.
Noting that the Senate last fall rejected the "Climate
Stewardship Act," he accuses the AGs of "seeking
to take over setting national policy from the Congress and
the president."
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