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As House Agriculture Committee Takes on the Chesapeake Bay Restoration, EPA Has the Law on Its Side

This morning a House Agriculture subcommittee will hold a hearing to "review the Chesapeake Bay TMDL, agricultural conservation practices, and their implications on national watersheds." Observers should be prepared for a trip to an alternate world.

The Chesapeake Bay has suffered for decades now because of nitrogen, phosphorous, and sediment pollution. Once-abundant fish, blue crab, and oyster populations plummeted, and local economies built around them have paid the price. Repeated state pledges to reduce the pollution and restore the Bay have fallen short time and again. If fixing the problem were easy, we would have done it already. It's not easy. But it's possible.

The EPA's current effort to restore the Bay is unquestionably the most serious effort to fix the problem. Decreasing the pollution that's harming the Bay will require some changes in how we all do business, so it's hardly surprising that the EPA's efforts have drawn opposition. But the rhetoric we have been hearing, and will hear today, from defenders of the status quo, is simply divorced from reality.

Big agriculture's representatives say that they've reduced their pollution, and there are plenty of examples of where that is the case. But that's little comfort: today, agriculture is the largest single source of nutrient pollution in the Chesapeake Bay, contributing an estimated 38 percent of the nitrogen and 45 percent of the phosphorous. The Bay and all of us who enjoy it suffer the consequences.

Advocates for the status quo have tried to paint a picture of EPA going beyond its bounds. Yet the reality is the opposite: EPA's Chesapeake Bay efforts have been squarely within its authority under the Clean Water Act (CWA) and an assortment of consent decrees and memoranda of understanding (MOU). These critics also suffer from a convenient case of amnesia, forgetting that the Bay states and the District of Columbia asked the EPA to set pollutant levels for the entire watershed. The EPA is acting at their behest. The agency's primary tool is a Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL), commonly called a "pollution diet" for the Bay, which sets a cap on the total amount of nitrogen, phosphorus, and sediment that can enter the Bay.

Under the CWA, a state has the first chance to set a TMDL, but the EPA has the authority to establish a federal TMDL if it disapproves of a state’s TMDL. Courts around the country have ruled that long-time failure of a state to submit a TMDL is grounds for EPA to act, which is exactly what’s been happening in the Bay watershed and has led to the lawsuits and MOUs. Moreover, restoration of the Bay would not likely occur if each state and D.C. attempted to restore their waters in a piecemeal fashion without some overarching coordination. Having the EPA lead the effort quite simply makes the most sense.

The agency has in fact bent over backwards to collaborate with states—some more recalcitrant than others—and has largely let states decide the exact controls and strategies for reducing pollution. What is important to the EPA, and communities around the watershed, is that the pollution is reduced and the Bay is restored. The EPA has been flexible, as long as the total pollution-reduction goal is achieved.

Pretending that we can restore the Chesapeake Bay without reducing the pollution, including from agricultural sources, is not helpful. It's not as if anyone has a secret tool up their sleeve to restore the Bay without decreasing our pollution into it. The EPA's opponents won't say it, but in reality blocking pollution limits would mean guaranteeing that the Chesapeake Bay be degraded for years to come.

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Rena Steinzor | March 16, 2011

As House Agriculture Committee Takes on the Chesapeake Bay Restoration, EPA Has the Law on Its Side

This morning a House Agriculture subcommittee will hold a hearing to “review the Chesapeake Bay TMDL, agricultural conservation practices, and their implications on national watersheds.” Observers should be prepared for a trip to an alternate world. The Chesapeake Bay has suffered for decades now because of nitrogen, phosphorous, and sediment pollution. Once-abundant fish, blue crab, […]

Frank Ackerman | March 15, 2011

Costs of Inaction: Popular Climate Econ Model Needs Major Overhaul

Cross-posted from Real Climate Economics. True or false: Risks of a climate catastrophe can be ignored, even as temperatures rise? The economic impact of climate change is no greater than the increased cost of air conditioning in a warmer future? The ideal temperature for agriculture could be 17 degrees C above historical levels? All true, […]

Sidney A. Shapiro | March 11, 2011

The BP Oil Spill: Hollow Regulation Meets Hobbled Law

This coming April 20 will mark the one-year anniversary of the first day of the BP Oil Spill – a three-month polluta-polluza that eventually became the largest accidental marine oil spill in the history of the world. That was the night that a long series of failures finally came to a head: failures aboard the Deepwater […]

Rena Steinzor | March 11, 2011

The Chamber Rides Again: Crazy Costs, Mythical Benefits

Not to be outdone by the Small Business Administration’s aptly named Office of Advocacy, the Chamber of Commerce has issued its own breathless report on how many jobs we could save if we did away with environmental, land use, and utility regulations. Crunching a bunch of dubious numbers, the SBA Office of Advocacy’s consultants, Nicole […]

Catherine O'Neill | March 11, 2011

In Coming Utility MACT, EPA Has Clean Air Act Authority to Make Big Strides in Protecting Americans from Mercury Pollution

By Wednesday of next week, EPA is due to publish its long-anticipated rule controlling mercury emissions from coal-fired utilities.  This is how we ought to judge the rule: does it follow the mandate of the Clean Air Act (CAA)? For too long, utilities have managed by various means to fend off regulation required by the CAA. Assuming EPA’s […]

Ben Somberg | March 9, 2011

Adler Op-Ed: Utah Working to Shut the Door to Citizen Involvement in Environmental Decisions

CPR Member Scholar Robert Adler has an op-ed in the Salt Lake Tribune looking at a series of developments in Utah — administrative actions as well as pending legislation — that could hinder citizen engagement in environmental decisions. The context, write Adler, is this: Whether or not one agrees that Tim DeChristopher was legally or […]

Amy Sinden | March 4, 2011

EPA Appears Poised To Give Troubling Role to Cost-Benefit Analysis In Setting Rules on Power Plant Cooling Water

When it comes to the use of cost-benefit analysis in setting environmental rules, it looks like President Obama’s EPA has taken a big swig of industry’s Kool-Aid. We’ll know for sure soon: The EPA has a March 14 deadline to issue its proposed Clean Water Act rule on cooling water intake structures at existing power […]

Ben Somberg | March 4, 2011

Press Examine Historical Evidence on the Costs of Regulation

Industry representatives have long made exorbitant claims about the costs of regulations, only to be proven wrong again and again. And despite that history, anti-regulatory campaigners repeat the scariest statistics their own experts come up with, even if those statistics were meant to include a range of possible outcomes, or included caveats of uncertainty. An […]

Daniel Farber | March 3, 2011

Michele Bachmann’s Unconstitutional Light-Bulb Bill

Cross-posted from Legal Planet. Michele Bachmann has introduced legislation to overturn the statute requiring the use of energy-efficient light bulbs, according to E&E News.  One  feature of the bill is its escape valve: Bachmann’s bill would allow the mandate to stand if the Government Accountability Office can prove the energy efficient bulbs would meet three […]