Energy

House Passes Bill To Rework The Most Expensive EPA Regulation Ever

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Tim Pearce Energy Reporter
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A House bill passed Tuesday updates the Clean Air Act and delays implementing Obama-era smog reduction regulations for eight more years until 2024.

The bill, called the Ozone Standards Implementation Act of 2017, passed the House 229 to 199 with bipartisan, though heavily Republican, support.

“Our nation has worked hard to reduce ozone levels and improve air quality,” Republican Texas Rep. Pete Olson, who sponsored the bill, said in press release. “My bill provides needed flexibility so that states and localities can adequately achieve new, lower standards with time for compliance. Health remains the first priority in setting standards and giving our local officials the tools they need make the Clean Air Act work. I’m proud that this common sense bill received bipartisan support in the House and I urge the Senate to act quickly as well.”

The act delays ozone standards the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) set in 2008. States were given until 2015 to comply with the new pollution regulations. Former President Barack Obama’s EPA, however, reconsidered the standards in 2010-2011 and delayed guidance states and businesses needed to properly adhere to the limit on ozone output, according to an American Petroleum Institute (API) letter written in support of the 2017 act’s passage.

Obama’s EPA then set new ozone standards in 2015 when the 2008 standards were set to be enacted. Many states had fallen behind in implementing the 2008 standards, however, because of the reconsideration period.

“The EPA did not account for this self-imposed delay when issuing the 2015 ozone standards, thereby imposing duplicative costs and burdens of implementing multiple standards simultaneously,” the API letter said. “This is particularly wasteful as the EPA itself projects that nearly the entire country would attain the 2015 ozone standards simply by being provided an opportunity to fully implement already-planned measures like their state implementation plans for the 2008 ozone standards.”

Opponents of the Ozone Standards Implementation Act viciously criticized the bill’s passage and dubbed it the “Smoggy Skies Act.” President and CEO of the American Lung Association Harold P. Wimmer claimed it placed millions of American lives at risk.

“The bill would delay lifesaving protections against ozone pollution, exposing Americans to unnecessary pollution levels that will lead to asthma attacks and premature deaths that could have been prevented,” Wimmer said in a statement. “The bill also permanently weakens Clean Air Act authority to reduce ozone and other harmful air pollutants like carbon monoxide, lead and particle pollution in the future.”

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