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Moran legislation would undo EPA greenhouse gas rule

Congressman Jerry Moran Dec. 16 introduced legislation to rescind an Environmental Protection Agency rule that would make carbon dioxide and five other greenhouse gases a danger to public health and welfare. The Dec. 7, EPA regulation allows the agency to put limits on greenhouse gas emissions under the Clean Air Act without the consent of Congress.

"The EPA must be stopped from making decisions that circumvent Congress and are not supported by current law," Moran said. "The Clean Air Act was never intended to regulate greenhouse gases and proceeding with this rule would have devastating effects on the economy. EPA-imposed regulations would prove more costly than the cap and trade bill I opposed in June. With the highest unemployment in a quarter century, the last thing Americans need is more bureaucratic red tape and fees that would destroy more jobs."

Moran's legislation invalidates the EPA rule and prevents the agency from issuing a similar regulation on greenhouse gas emissions unless Congress passes a subsequent law authorizing such a regulation. The legislation, known as a disapproval resolution, is a procedure authorized under the Congressional Review Act of 1996. The Act provides a process through which Congress can invalidate regulations it believes exceed an agency's authority.

Moran also sponsored legislation earlier this year that would prohibit carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases from being classified as air pollutants under the Clean Air Act.


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Comments on Articles article 2009- 53 - 1217MoranlegislationEPAgasr.cfm
Reader Comments
rdelrosso2001 — 12/30/2009 07:12:27
Sounds like the Congressman read Charles Hurt's Dec 1st column in the NY Post, where he described CO2 as something needed for life on earth. True, but disengenous. Oxygen is also needed for life, but if the percentage of O2 in the air increased much beyond the prsent 20%, we'd find it harder to put out fires. CO2 PPM is 387 now up 28% from 280PPm in 1780 (Scientific Amer Jan 2010 pg 14) and it'd going up at least 2 PPM each year. How high can it go before we have a "tipping point" event? (i.e Gulf Stream shuts down, all Artic Ice mels in summer, etc.)

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