Section 115 in Practice

Combating Climate Change with Section 115 of the Clean Air Act (Burger, M. ed.) (Elgar, 2020 Forthcoming)

19 Pages Posted: 26 Jun 2020

See all articles by Justin Gundlach

Justin Gundlach

New York State Department of Public Service

Date Written: September 19, 2019

Abstract

Days before President Reagan’s inauguration and over a year after initiating negotiations with Canadian regulators, the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency under President Carter sought to activate Section 115 of the Clean Air Act and thereby commit the federal government to regulating the coal-fired power plants thought to be primarily responsible for causing acid rain in Canada and the United States. His attempt kicked off a decade of litigation and regulatory maneuvering between proponents and opponents of limiting power plants’ sulfur dioxide emissions. The D.C. Circuit’s 1990 decision resolving that dispute involved very little interpretation of Section 115’s language, and so put almost no constraint on how EPA might interpret that language in the future. This lack of constraint was evident from comments on Section 115 submitted in 2008 to the Bush Administration’s EPA, which had sought input on options for regulating greenhouse gas emissions under the Clean Air Act. Neither EPA nor the courts have engaged with Section 115 since.

Keywords: Clean Air Act, climate change, EPA, acid rain, greenhouse gas emissions

Suggested Citation

Gundlach, Justin, Section 115 in Practice (September 19, 2019). Combating Climate Change with Section 115 of the Clean Air Act (Burger, M. ed.) (Elgar, 2020 Forthcoming), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3572122

Justin Gundlach (Contact Author)

New York State Department of Public Service ( email )

3 Empire State Plaza
Albany, NY 12223-1350
United States

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