President Obama's hidden EPA Enabling Act

President Barack Obama delivers the commencement address at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New London, Conn., May 20, 2015. During his comments, Obama discussed the impact of climate change on national security. DoD screen shot
President Barack Obama delivers the commencement address at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New London, Conn., May 20, 2015. During his comments, Obama discussed the impact of climate change on national security.
DoD screen shot

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

h/t JoNova – a group of lawyers at Columbia Law School have urged President Obama that he invoke a little known clause in the Clean Air Act, which the advocates claim would allow the EPA to immediately seize direct control over state economies, with a view to forcing down CO2 emissions.

… Fortunately for the president, there’s a new way for him to right the U.S.’ greenhouse gas trajectory before leaving office: Buried in the Clean Air Act is an extremely powerful mechanism that effectively gives EPA carte blanche to tell states to make drastic cuts to their emissions.

This provision, which can now be used thanks to the completion of the Paris climate deal, raises important questions about national sovereignty and states’ rights — questions that Republicans would undoubtedly use to try and kill such a proposal. But the benefits of using this mechanism dwarf those concerns.

A few weeks ago, a group of 13 prominent environmental law professors and attorneys released a 91-page report outlining this new approach, which would allow EPA to use existing laws to quickly and efficiently regulate all pollution sources, in all states — not just power plants and cars. The experts concluded, “It could provide one of the most effective and efficient means to address climate change pollution in the United States.”

Here’s how it works: A rarely used provision of the Clean Air Act — Section 115 — gives EPA the authority to mandate that every U.S. state cut its emissions by whatever amount the agency determines is necessary to protect public health and welfare if two things happen.

First, EPA must receive a report or studies from an “international agency” showing that U.S. air pollution is anticipated to endanger public health or welfare in a foreign country. The many reports put out by the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change over the past few decades meet this requirement. The U.S. is one of the top greenhouse gas emitters in the world, and its pollution undoubtedly endangers public health and welfare in many other countries.

Second, EPA must determine that the foreign country harmed by U.S. pollution has given the U.S. “essentially the same rights with respect to the prevention … of air pollution occurring in that country.” In other words, there needs to be reciprocity. That’s where the newly signed Paris agreement becomes important. The Paris agreement satisfies this reciprocity requirement because there are now nearly 190 countries planning to reduce their emissions, at least in part, to protect one another’s health and welfare. …

Read more: http://www.politico.com/agenda/agenda/story/paris-climate-deal-epa-obama-000034#ixzz3ywx66ltN

From the 91 page Columbia Law School report;

The success of the recent climate negotiations in Paris provides a strong basis for invoking a powerful tool available to help achieve the country’s climate change goals: Section 115 of the Clean Air Act, titled “International Air Pollution.” This provision authorizes EPA to require states to address emissions that contribute to air pollution endangering public health or welfare in other countries, if the other countries provide the U.S. with reciprocal protections. The language of Section 115 does not limit the agency to regulating a particular source-type, or a given industrial or economic sector. Rather, it grants EPA and the states broad latitude to address international air pollution comprehensively through the Clean Air Act’s State Implementation Plan process, increasing administrative efficiency and reducing burdens on regulated companies. EPA and the states could use the provision to establish an economy-wide, market-based approach for reducing GHG emissions. Such a program could provide one of the most effective and efficient means to address climate change pollution in the United States.

The text of the report can be read here.

This powerful provision was most likely meant to be invoked in an emergency situation, say to prevent a war, in the case that another country blamed America for damaging pollution. However the current political standoff has created a new and terrible use for this time bomb of a clause, which in my opinion has the potential to topple the constitutional balance of the United States of America.

Politico of course, is celebrating that the President has the power to seize control of the national economy, because they don’t think there are any other options currently available to reduce greenhouse emissions. Like other deep greens, Politico seem to have no problem embracing the authoritarian option, when voters fail to deliver the desired policy direction.

To his credit, President Obama has not yet acted on this hideous advice. Let us hope that for the sake of the American Republic, the President helps to defuse this dangerous law, rather than invoking it.

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jvcstone
February 1, 2016 4:11 pm

Eric W. states ” which in my opinion has the potential to topple the constitutional balance of the United States of America.” I my opinion, the constitutional balance was toppled a long time ago. Maybe an action such as this would be the proverbial straw, and give the states enough cajones to finally tell the out of control federal government to ef off. While governmental organizations such as the EPA, FDA, USDA, and any other letter combo one might think of are the creation of congress, don’t they reside in the executive branch and thus under the control (whim) of the president?? Time for the states to take back their republic, and the people their government–too much unconstitutional activity for way too long up there inside the beltway.

NW sage
February 1, 2016 4:33 pm

Liberal thought (aka Politico) has long been strongly biased in favor of authoritarian rule vs democratic – people – rights. If Obama were to take such a step it might well be regarded as a “high crime and misdemeanor” as described in the US Constitution. Hopefully the effects of such a step, if taken, would be delayed by legal maneuvers until the opposing political party has obtained an overwhelming majority in the Senate (where the trial would be held).

MarkW
Reply to  NW sage
February 2, 2016 6:42 am

The only way the opposing party can gain seats is via an election. (I’m discounting death and retirement)
The next scheduled election is also the election that will replace Obama as president.

Reply to  MarkW
February 2, 2016 11:58 am

Assuming it happens

Retired Kit P
February 1, 2016 4:49 pm

This is easy. No problem I can not solve by doing nothing. Withdraw the navy except for subs with nuke missiles. The loons will close the sea lanes. Fossil fuel use will plummet but the US will have plenty.
Sure some folks might die because food shipments will stop.
Working in the power industry I am not amazed that safety regulations are less stringent for agriculture.
My point is that we live in an interconnected world. Real problems supersede political ones. When there is not energy to keep homes warm and schools open, then the problems gets solved by getting a new politician.

February 1, 2016 5:02 pm

Sure, sure,
My interpretation of the regs allows that all the states should be required (by EPA) to limit emissions to 1/50th of the total for the country, so as to best protect the rest of the world.
So, we need to figure out what our country’s allowable output (to protect italy) is, and then stick with it. (maybe the geniuses at EPA get some advice from the people at duke)
Montana is not harming france, italy or any other country… but California, New York, Texas, and those other high emitters need to to be reigned in and limited. Keep in mind that the more green energy they use to replace the CO2 associated stuff, the bigger positive boost to their economies … so they (the large emitters) shouldn’t complain.

Reply to  DonM
February 1, 2016 5:10 pm

+11

Barbara
February 1, 2016 6:23 pm

After the U.S. economy gets “killed-off” there won’t be many jobs for lawyers. They will have to scramble around looking for any kind of jobs they can get just like lawyers had to do during the Great Depression.
The same will be true for economists. No business and no economic forecasts needed.

Rascal
Reply to  Barbara
February 1, 2016 9:39 pm

Despite their years of learning, most would be at the bottom of the heap, with crafts people at the top.

Mickey Reno
February 1, 2016 6:55 pm

I hope that Obama is intelligent enough to realize that IF he tried to do this stupid thing, he’d be risking impeachment, an ignoble finish to an already horrendous presidency. And probably some Democrats in the Senate would be smart enough to know that they’d been hitched to his Marxist/Socialist wagon long enough.

February 1, 2016 6:56 pm

Proof that it is all about control. If CO2 is the cause of warming and all of the other doomsday scenarios, then WHY are they not building 10 new Nuclear Power Plants a year until all electricity comes from clean zero emission power which produces less CO2 than any renewable (from cradle to grave)? Why are they shutting down Nuclear Power Plants?
It is all about CONTROL!

Tom Judd
February 1, 2016 7:28 pm

Don’t worry. I just read, immediately before traveling over to this site, that Politico reports that up to 25% of all federal employees would resign if …
… Are you ready?…
… if Donald Trump is elected President.
Regardless of what one thinks of Donald Trump no one, no one alive, no on Earth, can convince me that he could possibly do more damage than those 25% of federal employees do on a daily basis.

Reply to  Tom Judd
February 1, 2016 7:48 pm

Tom Judd,
They were saying much the same thing before Reagan was elected in a landslide.
But no federal employees quit. They were just being spoiled gasbags. They knew that the minute they quit, there’d be a line of applicants from LA to SF applying for thier non-essential bureaucrat jobs.

Rascal
Reply to  dbstealey
February 1, 2016 9:34 pm

They wouldn’t “quit” per se, but take early retirement, and collect whatever pensions they could.
I agree that those not eligible to collect pensions would NOT quit, although the number of sick days and vacation day might increase.

DD More
Reply to  dbstealey
February 2, 2016 1:05 pm

If Trump elected, fed employees consider quitting job?
The trade publication Government Executive reports that a survey of federal employees found that 14 percent said they would consider leaving the federal service if Trump were elected. Another 11 percent said “maybe.” Democrats and Democrat-leaners were more likely to say they would bail on their job if Trump were elected — 26 percent of whom said they would definitely leave compared to 4 percent of
Republicans and Republican-leaners. Another 16 percent of Democrats and Democrat-leaners said they would “maybe” leave compared to 4 percent of Republicans and Republican-leaners.

http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2016/02/01/survey-1-in-4-federal-employees-say-they-will-consider-quitting-if-trump-elected/
My comment, “Good Start. If they follow thru.”

StarkNakedTruth
Reply to  Tom Judd
February 2, 2016 5:20 am

25%? Well…that’s a start.

MarkW
Reply to  Tom Judd
February 2, 2016 6:44 am

Every election cycle, some Hollywood “celebrity” declares that if the Republican wins, they are moving to Europe.
Yet they never do. Sigh.

Reply to  Tom Judd
February 2, 2016 2:52 pm

If I believed it (25% would quit), I would be jumping on the trump bandwagon … hell, I’d be up front driving the thing through town.
But I don’t believe it,

Rascal
February 1, 2016 9:28 pm

First – despite the CAA wording, the fact that the regulation is enforced without the approval of the Senate will call into question the Constitutional legitimacy of the pResident enacting what is essentially a treaty.
Second – it will have to be proven in a court of law that the “offending” emission originated in the US.
Third – such action might trigger a civil war. You can push people only so far. This time, the seceding states would most likely enjoy the advantages of industrial and military supremacy, quite the opposite of the last time.

MarkW
Reply to  Rascal
February 2, 2016 6:45 am

Most liberals are afraid of guns.

601nan
February 1, 2016 10:05 pm

11 months to go = Dead Duck.
Even if Obama were killed 30 months ago the Federal bureaucracy would not be able to deal with it for another 120 months.
Ronald Reagan, “Ah … It doesn’t matter.”
Ha ha

David Sivyer
February 2, 2016 12:35 am

“Enabling Act”…….shades of you know who!

Russell
February 2, 2016 1:55 am

This is the reason they will use to Enabling the Act. The World Health Org., i.e. UN is fully behind it.
Zika and Climate
Guest essay by Eric Worrall The Australian Journal of Pharmacy has just tried to link climate change, to the terrifying Zika Virus outbreak in South and Central America. The Zika Virus, a mosquito born disease, has been implicated in an upsurge of serious birth defects. CLIMATE CHANGE COULD WORSEN DISEASES LIKE ZIKA VIRUS

Russell
Reply to  Russell
February 2, 2016 2:00 am

The FIX is in. ZIKA

Patrick MJD
Reply to  Russell
February 2, 2016 2:03 am

What about Ross river fever? That will kill you. Well I guess it will eventually shrink your head.

Russell
February 2, 2016 2:56 am

Patrick MjD I’am with you. This WHOrg., i.e. UN along with USDA in my opinion are kill people with their diet recommandations. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=da1vvigy5tQ

Russell
Reply to  Russell
February 2, 2016 3:19 am

(CNN) The World Health Organization declared a “public health emergency of international … The link will be made Climate Change just watch.

February 2, 2016 4:44 am

For those that still believe there is a difference between the ruling parties-keep in mind that Nixon created the EPA and GWH Bush signed the Clean Air Act.

Reply to  Billyjack
February 2, 2016 8:33 am

Billyjack February 2, 2016 at 4:44 am
For those that still believe there is a difference between the ruling parties-keep in mind that Nixon created the EPA and GWH Bush ,,,
———————–
GHW Bush. Herbert Walker.
Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 (104 Stat. 2468, P.L. 101-549)

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  Billyjack
February 2, 2016 9:16 am

Irrelevant, and a red herring argument. Different time period, and the EPA did get some things right in prior years. Now, though, it is a monstrosity.

February 2, 2016 5:37 am

Environmental Law enters its terminal phase: provoking a Constitutional crisis.
Yet another reason the States must convene an Article V convention to repair the relationship the federal government has with the States and the People.

MarkW
Reply to  buckwheaton
February 2, 2016 6:47 am

My only problem with an Article V convention is that the people who are likely to be running it, are the same ones who have been causing our problems in the first place.

MarkW
February 2, 2016 6:16 am

If he pulls this stunt one of two things will happen, he’ll be impeached, or states will start seceding.

Russell
Reply to  MarkW
February 2, 2016 6:27 am

Alberta going to separate from Canada.

MarkW
Reply to  Russell
February 2, 2016 6:46 am

As far as I’m concerned, if they want, they can join up with the secessionist US states.

Russell
Reply to  Russell
February 2, 2016 6:53 am

MarkW: Alberta must join if Cruz becomes President.
Ted Cruz Wins Republican Caucuses in Iowa

MarkW
February 2, 2016 6:17 am

“Like other deep greens, Politico seem to have no problem embracing the authoritarian option,”
Leftism is at it’s core an authoritarian option.

Patricia
February 2, 2016 6:24 am

Scary. Very scary. That US lawyers would advocate erasing US sovereignty.

MarkW
Reply to  Patricia
February 2, 2016 6:48 am

Liberals have no use for any authority that doesn’t advocate what they desire. It was only a few years ago that they were praising the ability of the Chinese dictatorship to “get things done”.

rtj1211
February 2, 2016 8:02 am

Lawyers are only ever interested in winning. They are NEVER interested in the truth, justice or arbitrating fairly when laws at one level contradict those at another.
For these lawyers to say ‘The Paris Agreement’ allows ‘activation of a US Law’ without questioning whether either the Paris agreement or the US law have any basis in scientific fact just shows you the limitations of lawyers in achieving justice.
That these lawyers have no interest in the US Constitution is also rather un-American……

February 2, 2016 8:10 am

Orwellian nightmare here we come.

RWturner
February 2, 2016 8:29 am

Did you guys know that they are already making a movie about Obama? It seems a little too soon and this trailer is long but I think it has a chance of being a hit.

February 2, 2016 8:29 am

the use of “CO2 pollution” is technically wrong on its face. CO2 is a vital part of our atmosphere. Real pollution isn’t. Real pollution can be diluted to undetectable levels and things get “better.”
The solution to pollution is dilution, as the saying goes. If that were to somehow happen to CO2, the biosphere would collapse completely, except for deep microbial life and deep ocean hot vent mineral-fed life forms.

3x2
February 2, 2016 10:41 am

outlining this new approach, which would allow EPA to use existing laws to quickly and efficiently regulate all pollution sources, in all states
Presumably the ‘pollution’ source would be that well known base of the planetary food chain known as Carbon Dioxide. (water + CO2 + sunlight = the entire food chain). EPA promoting CO2 as some kind of pollutant is the equivalent of killing millions of people without using the tedium of using Zyklon B.
The world population grows and starving them (of CO2) is the equivalent of some whack job plan to kill them off. Those people need to be in the food chain and the EPA is trying to deny them that position. Nuremberg is something that comes to mind for some reason.

tadchem
February 2, 2016 12:24 pm

The arrogance of those in power, especially when motivated by the egotistical belief that only they can save the world, is such that they will ignore all legal, moral, and ethical constraints to do what they sincerely believe is right for everybody else. Never mind that everybody else disagrees with them.
This is the commonality among all autocratic, dictatorial, and totalitarian regimes.
‘They are doing it for the good of all of the rest of us.’
The only thing worse I can think of is that there are naive fools who will energetically support this erosion of their own rights.

MarkW
Reply to  tadchem
February 2, 2016 12:36 pm

The scariest thing in the world is a person who is convinced that he is in the process of perfecting mankind. Such a person will let nothing, not even mankind itself stand in his way.
Look at how socialists/communists have murdered millions without blinking an eye.

Ann Banisher
Reply to  tadchem
February 2, 2016 1:30 pm

Brings to mind on of my favorite quotes:
“Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron’s cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience.”
― C.S. Lewis

tadchem
February 2, 2016 12:28 pm

I am trying desperately not to trigger Godwin’s Law, but it is exactly circumstances such as this that reinforce it.

JohnKnight
Reply to  tadchem
February 2, 2016 4:13 pm

They never remember “law” ?