Court Rejects EPA Rule that Deferred Carbon Standards for Biomass Industry

Court Rejects EPA Rule that Deferred Car­bon Stan­dards for Bio­mass Industry

- by Jere­my P. Jacobs and Jean Chem­nick, July 12, 2013. Source: Envi­ron­ment and Ener­gy Daily

A three-judge pan­el scrapped a U.S. EPA rule today that had giv­en bio­mass-burn­ing facil­i­ties a pass on com­pli­ance with fed­er­al green­house gas emis­sion standards.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Dis­trict of Colum­bia Cir­cuit pan­el found EPA failed to jus­ti­fy its 2011 deci­sion that pro­vid­ed a three-year exemp­tion to its green­house gas rules for facil­i­ties that burn mate­ri­als rang­ing from wood and algae to scrap tires.

In exempt­ing bio­mass, EPA said it need­ed more time to study the over­all impact of the indus­try’s car­bon diox­ide emis­sions. Indus­try has con­tend­ed that in some instances — wood burn­ing, for exam­ple — bio­mass facil­i­ties have a net neu­tral CO2 impact because trees absorb the heat-trap­ping gas before they are cut down.

Envi­ron­men­tal­ists did­n’t buy EPA’s approach. The Cen­ter for Bio­log­i­cal Diver­si­ty said the “blan­ket exemp­tion” vio­lat­ed the agen­cy’s green­house gas policies.

EPA’s 2010 “tai­lor­ing rule” out­lined a phase-in for green­house gas stan­dards. In Jan­u­ary 2011, the lim­its applied only to large facil­i­ties that already required per­mits for ozone, sul­fur diox­ide and oth­er so-called con­ven­tion­al pol­lu­tants. About six months lat­er, the pro­gram expand­ed to apply to large emis­sion sources that weren’t required to seek Clean Air Act per­mits for oth­er pollutants.

Dur­ing that time, the agency grant­ed a peti­tion for review by the Nation­al Alliance of For­est Own­ers that argued some bio­mass sources were car­bon-neu­tral over their life cycles. In June 2011, the agency pro­posed a three-year exclu­sion for all “bio­genic CO2 emis­sions” in the tai­lor­ing rule.

The Cen­ter for Bio­log­i­cal Diver­si­ty con­tends the bio­mass facil­i­ties’ inclu­sion was “trig­gered” by the Clean Air Act when EPA began reg­u­lat­ing green­house gas emissions.

At argu­ments in April, EPA tried to make the case that the sci­ence on bio­mass sources was unclear and the agency need­ed more time to study it.

The argu­ments before the court pan­el cen­tered on whether the Clean Air Act allowed EPA to con­sid­er “net” CO2 emis­sions over a fuel’s life cycle when set­ting emis­sion lim­its (Green­wire, April 8).

In the case of bio­mass, this could include the impact grow­ing a fuel crop might have on car­bon emis­sions due to land use change.

The court sided with the envi­ron­men­tal group, find­ing among oth­er things that EPA failed to explain what the next steps might be for reg­u­lat­ing bio­mass facil­i­ties under the Clean Air Act, which might jus­ti­fy a delay in that rulemaking.

“We sim­ply have no idea what EPA believes con­sti­tutes ‘full com­pli­ance’ with the statute,” the judges wrote in their deci­sion. “In oth­er words, the defer­ral Rule is one step towards … what?

“With­out a clear answer to that ques­tion, EPA has no basis for invok­ing the one-step-at-a-time doctrine.”

Envi­ron­men­tal­ists hailed the deci­sion. Frank O’Don­nell, pres­i­dent of Clean Air Watch, said EPA’s move to “cut a spe­cial break for bio­mass pol­lu­tion was quite obvi­ous­ly a polit­i­cal one — and today’s court deci­sion right­ly found that the admin­is­tra­tion broke the law.”

Dave Ten­ny, pres­i­dent and CEO of the Nation­al Alliance of For­est Own­ers, said in an email to Green­wire that the court’s deci­sion should add urgency to EPA’s effort to amend its tai­lor­ing rule to reflect “the full car­bon ben­e­fits of bio­mass ener­gy.” Such an amend­ment might per­ma­nent­ly exempt the indus­try from EPA’s CO2 regulations.

“We stand pre­pared to work with EPA and [the Depart­ment of Agri­cul­ture] to com­plete this process quick­ly and effec­tive­ly,” he said.


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