Quality. Independence. Impact.

Home | Contact Us | Media Resources

Friday September 5, 2008

Welcome   |   Register   |   Log in

Past Event

Judicial Issues Forum | No. 12

« Previous | Next »

A Governance Studies Event

Does the Clean Air Act Require the EPA to Combat Global Warming?

Courts, Environment, Environmental Regulation, Energy Security, Justice and Law

Event Summary

On November 29, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments on one of the most important environmental cases in decades, Massachusetts v. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The justices reviewed a federal appeals court ruling in favor of the Bush Administration's refusal to regulate greenhouse gas emissions.

Judicial Issues Forum

Event Information

When

Monday, December 04, 2006
2:00 PM to 4:00 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC 20036
Map

Contact: Office of Communications

E-mail: communications@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

Massachusetts, 11 other states, cities and environmental groups say that the agency should regulate such emissions, which are widely seen as a major cause of global warming. The Administration, another nine states, industrial interests, and others respond that the EPA has no legal power or duty to regulate such emissions, and a requirement could impose vast economic burdens with negligible impact on the global warming problem.

On December 4, the Brookings Institution continued its Judicial Issues Forum series with Stuart Taylor, Brookings nonresident senior fellow, who moderated a discussion on the case and the larger issues around global warming. He was joined by Gregg Easterbrook, Brookings visiting fellow; David Sandalow, Brookings Environment Scholar; David Doniger, policy director of Natural Resources Defense Council Climate Center; Robert Reynolds, partner, Alston & Bird LLP; and Mark Moller, constitutional studies senior fellow at the Cato Institute.

 

Transcript

DAVID SANDALOW: Federal legislation is coming; the only question is how and when. In part I say this because of the recent elections. One of the most dramatic changes in committee chairmanships in the Congress was the change at Senate Environment and Public Works Committee from Jim Inhofe to Barbara Boxer. Senator Inhofe did call global warming the biggest hoax ever perpetrated on mankind; Senator Barbara Boxer of California is a leading advocate of action on global warming. Speaker Pelosi has been very outspoken on this issue. But maybe even more fundamentally, I believe federal legislation is coming because of where the Republican Party is on this issue. Right now we have the Republican governors in the nation's two largest states, New York and California, having taken aggressive steps on this issue.

We have who most people I think believe to be the leading candidate for the Republican nomination, the President of the United States, John McCain, is one of the leaders in the Congress on this issue. The outgoing Republican Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Richard Lugar who I believe has an ADA rating of around 20 percent, no liberal by anybody's measure, is very outspoken about the need to take on this issue. So one way to think about this is if we have either a Democrat or John McCain as president starting in 2009, we will have a president ready to sign legislation on this issue and I think the odds in Vegas on either a Democrat or John McCain being president are not bad, and I think this is happening.

The business community is I think both actually a leading and lagging indicator on this. The world's biggest by two different measures have both taken aggressive steps on this. General Electric, which I believe is the largest company in the world in terms of market capitalization, has announced major initiatives in this area. Jeffrey Immelt, the CEO, sees his company making lots of money by the move toward clean energy over the course of the next several decades. And Wal-Mart, which I believe has the greatest revenues of any company in the world, is taking very aggressive steps to save energy and cut costs. As a result of doing that, they have had Al Gore down in Arkansas to talk to all of the Wal-Mart employees around the country. So I think this is happening and I believe federal legislation is coming, a lot of the business community knows this, and the only question is how and when.

Participants

Moderator

Stuart Taylor, Jr.

Nonresident Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution
Columnist, National Journal; Contributor, Newsweek

Panelists

David Doniger

Policy Director, Natural Resources Defense Council Climate Center

David B. Sandalow

Senior Fellow, Foreign Policy

Gregg Easterbrook

Visiting Fellow, Governance Studies

Mark Moller

Senior Fellow in Constitutional Studies, Cato Institute

Robert C. Reynolds, Jr.

Partner, Alston & Bird LLP

My Portfolio

My New Content

View suggested content based on items you have saved to your Portfolio.
Log in or register now