Last year, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) replaced the Obama Administration’s Clean Power Plan, which sought substantial cuts in greenhouse gas emissions from power plants, with the so-called Affordable Clean Energy (ACE) rule, a far weaker policy that will, at best, yield modest reductions below business-as-usual emissions and, at worst, increase pollution from the electric sector. We filed an amicus brief in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit highlighting three key errors in EPA’s rationale for repealing the Clean Power Plan. Specifically, we explain, EPA misstates regulatory precedent and Clean Air Act legislative history supporting the Clean Power Plan and disregards the substantial harms that the ACE Rule will cause.
Related Reading
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Statement on EPA’s Package of Power Plant Regulations
Media Resources / April 25, 2024
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Within Its Wheelhouse: EPA’s Latest Power Plant Regulations Rely on Traditional Approaches Left Available After West Virginia v. EPA
Publications / April 24, 2024
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Defining “Adequately Demonstrated”: EPA’s Long History of Forward-Looking Standards Under Section 111 of the Clean Air Act
Publications / April 24, 2024
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Statement on EPA’s Standards for Light- and Medium-Duty Vehicles
Media Resources / March 20, 2024
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Supplemental Comments to EPA on Reliability & the Proposed GHG Regulations for Fossil Fuel-Fired Power Plants
Project Updates / December 20, 2023