On Capitol Hill today, industry leaders and other experts explained why the upcoming U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) standards on carbon dioxide emissions can benefit U.S. business and help drive innovation while keeping our air and water clean.
In the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center, I moderated a panel featuring representatives from businesses and public interest organizations: Paul Allen, Senior Vice President for Corporate Affairs and Chief Environmental Officer at Constellation Energy, Dan Greenbaum, President of the Health Effects Institute, Franz Litz, Senior Fellow at WRI, and Dick Munson, Senior Vice President of Public Affairs at Recycled Energy Development. Representative Jay Inslee (WA-1) opened the discussion.
This group of “strange bedfellows” had one thing in common: a strong interest in ensuring Congress does not extend the current period of regulatory uncertainty by preventing the EPA from using the Clean Air Act to regulate emissions. Panelists addressed several myths about the regulations often advanced by opponents of EPA action.
The first myth is that businesses and regulated industries are universally opposed to EPA standards that protect the public health and environment.
Our view is that EPA is doing its best to follow the instructions, to play the game by the rules. We’re in an industry that is completely capable of responding to those rules. We expect that there will be reasonable flexibility in both the rules and enforcement guidelines.
– Paul Allen, Senior Vice President for Corporate Affairs and Chief Environmental Officer at Constellation Energy
Paul Allen from the Baltimore-based utility Constellation Energy, a leading energy services company, stated, “Our view is that EPA is doing its best to follow the instructions, to play the game by the rules. We’re in an industry that is completely capable of responding to those rules. We expect that there will be reasonable flexibility in both the rules and enforcement guidelines.”
Allen pointed to two different periods in recent decades when the electric utility industry aptly demonstrated its ability to make rapid capital investment decisions by installing dozens of gigawatts of new power plant capacity over the course of just a few years.
“What’s important is that we get on with it,” Allen said.
Allen went on to discuss how existing state and federal regulations have led Constellation to make pollution control investments, resulting in jobs and economic benefits for his company. Unraveling the myth that EPA regulations will cost jobs, Allen said:
“Constellation Energy has made investments in our largest coal-fired power plants, creating 1600-job years1 for boilermakers and ironworkers and carpenters and master electricians and millwrights.”
My own research on the U.S. manufacturing sector has found that installing efficiency-related pollution control upgrades could result in very substantial cost savings that would provide both immediate and lasting benefits to surrounding communities, both in terms of job security and environmental health.
Panelists also listed certainty -— clear signals from the federal government on which regulations are happening, and when – as a critical reason for wanting pending EPA regulations to not be delayed beyond currently established timelines.
Dick Munson from Recycled Energy Development, a company that helps manufacturers convert wasted energy into electricity and heat, explained, “the more certainty we can have, the more business and American industry can respond.”
Allen agreed: “We are staunch believers in markets and price signals that markets deliver to people who are making very large capital investments in the electric power sector.”
Despite industry claims that EPA standards could be a burden on American companies, panelists countered that standards would help them develop new products and more efficient technologies.
“Let’s have faith in American innovation, for goodness sake!” said Munson.
In addition to the direct economic benefits that can be gained from EPA standards, Dan Greenbaum and Representative Inslee pointed out the costs if EPA does not act.
Greenbaum, an internationally recognized expert on the subject, provided an overview of the negative health effects tied to inefficient power plants and greenhouse gases, including asthma, heart disease and cancer, each of which impose very significant hidden costs to society and a drag on the economy.
WRI’s Franz Litz also outlined how EPA is acting within the bounds of the law and moving at a reasonable pace.
“The Clean Air Act is an instruction manual that previous congresses gave EPA. They did not give the EPA a blank check or a blank piece of paper to write any regulations they wanted. The EPA is expected to act reasonably.”
As panelists spoke, it was clear that they agreed with WRI’s research finding that well-designed EPA regulations can be both a win for the economy and for the environment.
As Allen summed up: “Companies have known for many years that these pollutants will be regulated. It’s not a surprise, it’s not a mystery, and it’s not something that needs necessarily to compromise the reliability of the U.S. electric power system.”
Presentations
- Paul Allen (PDF, 5 pages, 313 Kb)
- Dr. Dan Greenbaum (PDF, 22 pages, 954 Kb)
- Franz Litz (Powerpoint, 1.1 Mb)
- Dick Munson (PDF, 10 pages, 281 Kb)
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A job-year is one person working for one year. ↩
James Bradbury, Senior Associatejbradbury@wri.org+1 (202) 729-7849James Bradbury is a Senior Associate in WRI’s Climate and Energy Program, conducting research and analysis on U.S. federal and state climate and clean energy policies.






2 Comments
Dear Mr. Brown, Thank you
Dear Mr. Brown,
Thank you for your comment. I’m sorry if you found the headline misleading, that certainly was not the intent. If you read the entire article, I trust that you were left with a more complete picture of the context for this briefing.
My colleagues and I, who organized and hosted this event, felt that the views expressed by the industry representatives on the panel were newsworthy, in the context of the many other industry voices that we typically hear from in the media. Without these voices being highlighted, many could be left with the false impression that this is just another story about public health vs. industry. There are nuances and one of those nuances is that industry is not united in opposition to regulations.
For example, you may be aware that Constellation Energy was recently joined, on the Wall Street Journal editorial page, by 7 other major investor-owned utilities in calling for EPA to proceed, without delay, on current and pending clean air and water rules (Dec. 8, 2010).
Additionally, Recycled Energy Development (RED) is one of several industrial efficiency companies who filed public comments in support of EPA's BACT guidance, commending EPA for encouraging state and local permitting authorities to focus on energy efficiency as the primary means for compliance (Dec. 1, 2010).
Though RED and Constellation may not represent the majority view of regulated industry, theirs is an important perspective, which is shared by a set of major U.S. companies with a significant economic stake in current deliberations before Congress regarding whether or not EPA should be allowed to use their existing EPA authorities to regulate greenhouse gas emissions.
-James
The headline (Industry
The headline (Industry Voices Support U.S. EPA Action on Clean Air Act) is misleading. You had a small sample of industry indeed (three or four) at the briefing. There are serious practical and legal issues with the CAA if you want to apply it to GHG. Folks at Resources for the Future (RFF) have been working this in some detail. They include Dallas Burtraw, Arthur G. Fraas, Nathan Richardson. You