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Appeals court revives Biden climate damage cost estimate

An appeals court has revived a Biden administration effort to account for potential damage from greenhouse gas emissions when creating rules for polluting industries

Via AP news wire
Thursday 17 March 2022 16:51 GMT

A federal appeals court has revived a Biden administration effort to account for potential damage from greenhouse gas emissions when creating rules for polluting industries.

A Louisiana-based federal judge had blocked the so-called “ social cost of carbon ” policy last month, saying it would bring costly regulatory burdens and drive up energy prices. But a panel of three 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals judges in New Orleans unanimously stayed the lower court in a ruling dated Wednesday, meaning the administration can continue using the policy while the court case goes on.

The panel said any regulatory burdens the policy might bring are speculative at this point and that Louisiana and other states challenging the policy therefore had no standing to sue.

The social cost of carbon attempts to put a dollar value on damage caused by every additional ton of greenhouse gases emitted into the atmosphere. That cost estimate would be used to shape future rules for oil and gas drilling, automobiles, and other industries, and a higher estimate could justify more stringent rules.

President Joe Biden on his first day in office restored the cost estimate to about $51 per ton of carbon dioxide emissions after the Trump administration had reduced the figure to about $7 or less per ton. Former President Donald Trump’s estimate included only damage felt in the U.S. versus the global damage captured in higher estimates that were previously used under the Obama administration.

Republicans and business groups have questioned the accuracy of the complex economic models used to derive the cost estimate. They argue that an emphasis on future climate damage would hobble the economy, particularly the energy industry.

The carbon cost estimate had not yet been used very much under Biden, but is being considered in a pending environmental review of oil and gas lease sales in western states.

The appeals court said U.S. District Judge James David Cain, a Trump appointee in Louisiana's Western district, had gone “outside the authority of the federal courts” in ordering the Biden administration “to comply with prior administrations' policies on regulatory analysis absent a specific agency action to review..."

Republican attorneys general led by Louisiana’s Jeff Landry had challenged the policy. The other states whose officials sued are Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, South Dakota, Texas, West Virginia and Wyoming.

The panel that ruled Wednesday included judges Leslie Southwick, appointed by President George W. Bush, and James Graves and Gregg Costa, both appointed by President Barack Obama.

A spokeswoman with the U.S. Department of the Interior said the administration was reviewing the decision.

Landry's office said the decision would be appealed to the full 17-member 5th Circuit.

“We strongly disagree with the 5th Circuit's opinion that we lack standing in Biden's latest attempt to inject the federal government into the everyday lives of Americans,” the statement said.

The ruling was welcomed by environmental groups Earthjustice and the Center for Biological Diversity.

“This commonsense decision simply allows the government to continue its usual consideration of the costs of climate damage, but we need a lot more than that from the Biden administration,” attorney Kassie Siegel, director of the Center for Biological Diversity’s Climate Law Institute, said in an emailed statement. “When it comes to the climate, Biden can’t continue business as usual. He has to meet this international crisis with bold executive action that speeds the transition to renewable energy and away from dangerous fossil fuels.”

Earthjustice senior attorney Hana Vizcarra said the ruling "puts the government back on track to address and assess climate change.”

——

Brown reported from Billings, Montana; Daly, from Washington.

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