This is by no means the first time the courts have
told the EPA that its penchant for heavy-handed regulation is out of order.
Earlier this year, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia
rejected the EPA’s attempt to retroactively veto a Clean Water Act permit
issued by the Army Corps of Engineers — in 2007. The court labeled the EPA’s interpretation
of the rule as “unreasonable.”
But the series of unfavorable (to the agency)
rulings has done nothing to reverse the federal government’s penchant for
hang-the-cost regulations. And that has real-world consequences. The regulatory
onslaught on coal, for example, is killing the industry and burdening American
consumers with artificially high energy costs.
A host of federal agencies are proposing and
implementing new rules that will increase the costs of mining coal, building
new plants (although new carbon-dioxide regulations make that next to
impossible) and operating existing plants — all for questionable or minimal
environmental or public health benefit.
Of course, the regulators promise tremendous
benefits. For instance, the EPA claims its mercury and air toxins rule would
produce $53 billion to $140 billion in annual benefits. Yet that figure
includes “co-benefits” that are supposed to be realized under existing
regulations. The benefits to be derived from the rule’s mercury reductions
would — by the EPA’s own reckoning — amount to at most $6 million, a fraction
of the estimated $10 billion in compliance costs.
But the new regulations are already producing very
real — and undesirable — consequences. Ohio’s FirstEnergy Corp. announced that
it will close six coal facilities because of the new environmental regulations.
A Georgia utility recently retracted funding for a permit application, citing
the EPA’s air-quality rules. That’s home-grown energy capacity — present and
future — down the tubes.
Since energy is needed to produce, transport and run
virtually everything used in modern work and play, these insensitive
regulations will drive up prices for virtually all goods and services —
including, ironically, basics such as heating and air conditioning, that are
critical to public health. Worse, these rising costs inevitably siphon away
resources that could be devoted to activities that truly would improve
America’s public health.
Undoubtedly, the abundance of natural-gas production
resulting from horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing has cushioned the
blows the administration is raining down upon America’s energy economy.
Fuel-switching for economic reasons is sensible. There’s certainly no reason
the U.S. should continue to mine coal or build coal-fired power plants just for
the sake of using coal. But there’s also no reason why the federal government
should artificially reduce coal’s role in energy production by creating an
environment that makes a decline in coal production inevitable.
And the higher energy prices are coming, too. PJM
Interconnection, which manages the electricity grid for 13 states and the
District of Columbia, held its capacity auction to determine the amount of
electricity necessary to meet expected demand. According to PJM, capacity
auction prices for 2015 were higher “because of retirements of existing
coal-fired generation resulting largely from environmental regulations which go
into effect in 2015.”
For decades, coal has literally been the rock that
has powered America with cheap, reliable energy. At current consumption rates,
coal can provide enough electricity to fuel our nation for the next 500 years.
Yet the current regulatory regime seems intent on penalizing and punishing
traditional forms of energy, while simultaneously subsidizing and guaranteeing
a market for its preferred (albeit as yet non-economical) alternative sources.
The recent U.S. Court of Appeals ruling is a welcome
recognition that the EPA’s unelected bureaucrats have gone too far. But
Congress must also step up to the plate and reform federal policies and
regulations to enable the market — not politicians and bureaucrats — to
determine the role of coal in U.S. electricity generation.
About the author: Nicolas Loris is the Herbert and
Joyce Morgan Fellow at the Heritage Foundation’s Roe Institute for Economic
Policy Studies.
This article was published by The Heritage
Foundation.
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