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Offsets in the USDA – The Bad, the OK, and the Unknown

Wednesday, I explored the various ways that the USDA takeover of bio-sequestration offsets could affect how well the offsets provision of the Waxman-Markey Climate Security Act would work. Today, we have legislative language in the form of an amendment offered by Rep. Collin Peterson (D-MN), which fills in some of the details.  While some of the changes may be helpful, others are cause for worry.

The amendment gives all offset authority over bio-sequestration and agricultural activities to the USDA – the authority to initially approve offset rules; to create rules for “additionality,” leakage, and permanence; to approve offsets themselves; and to account for reversals. The language does remain specific about what must guide the rulemaking, and is also specific about accounting for reversals and holding offset credits in reserve for reversals. The offset reversal part of the law does expand the list of offsets eligible for requirements of insurance or reserve, but it also gives the USDA unilateral power to not require that reserves be replenished for unintentional failure of offsets if it was because of a “natural disaster.” (Sec. 504(c)(3)(B)(iii)).

Besides these changes, the effect of the change from the EPA to the USDA over the majority of domestic offsets depends on whether or not one thinks that the USDA can do as good a job or not at coming up with genuine rules and adequately policing these rules. Because the USDA is not primarily an enforcement and compliance body (unlike the EPA), environmentalists have their worries.

Far more problematic is that the new amendment offers no general requirement that the USDA (or any other agency) consider the negative environmental impacts of offsets generally. While the provision for native plants and species for forestry sequestration remains (Sec. 510), there is now no authority for general environmental consideration of offsets. Since the EPA is still to have some role in the domestic bio-sequestration offsets, one can only hope that the statutory language will retain the prior Sec. 741, giving the EPA the authority to review and disapprove environmentally negative offsets. While the Offset advisory committee has the power to ascertain environmental impacts and make recommendations within five years, this is not real power to control environmental harms. This will also complicate the arguments with states about program pre-emption as California has made it abundantly clear that the co-environmental effects of offsets is an important consideration.

One possible positive of the new amendment is that it sets out an initial list of offsets in the bill itself. While this may short-circuit the review process (and blunt any consideration the old advisory committee would have had over environmental effects), it does mean that offsets will arrive in the market sooner, and this will make the initial trading market more liquid and less volatile. But the problem with this list is that it goes further than prior lists and allows things such as “agroforestry” as an offset without studying the habitat implications.

Does this mean that the new offset program will be terrible, or as people feared, not represent real reductions? Not necessarily. The amendment does retain very specific language about how leakage, additionality, and permanence are defined, and this provides some protection against fake offset reductions, but the offset program does need a way to have environmental review of offsets, either in general sectors at the beginning or by the EPA (or another agency). The lack of this consideration is dangerous. It could lead to offsets that do actually sequester GHGs, but come with an otherwise high environmental or social cost.

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Victor Flatt | June 26, 2009

Offsets in the USDA – The Bad, the OK, and the Unknown

Wednesday, I explored the various ways that the USDA takeover of bio-sequestration offsets could affect how well the offsets provision of the Waxman-Markey Climate Security Act would work. Today, we have legislative language in the form of an amendment offered by Rep. Collin Peterson (D-MN), which fills in some of the details.  While some of […]

Ben Somberg | June 25, 2009

Running the Cost-Benefit Analysis on the Metro Crash?

What was the cost, in dollar terms, of the nine lives lost in the DC Metro crash on Monday? And how does that compare to what the cost would have been to prevent the accident, or lessen the severity of it? Should we do a cost-benefit analysis to determine the best policy? Edward Tenner's post […]

Victor Flatt | June 24, 2009

Handing Primary Control of Offsets to USDA: What this Might Mean

Last night, House Energy and Commerce Chair Henry Waxman announced that he had agreed with Agriculture Committee Chair Collin Peterson that the USDA could have jurisdiction over agricultural offsets in the massive American Clean Energy and Security Act, which the House may vote on this Friday. In agreeing to what had been one of the […]

Daniel Farber | June 23, 2009

Supreme Court Decides Coeur Alaska

Cross-posted by permission from Legal Planet. In an opinion by Justice Kennedy, the Supreme Court decided two issues in this case, over a dissent by Justice Ginsburg.  The first was whether the Clean Air Act gives authority to the United States Army Corps of Engineers, or instead to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), to issue […]

Victor Flatt | June 23, 2009

The Roberts Court Gets Reckless with Administrative Law in Coeur Alaska: Problems Now, Problems Later

Yesterday the Supreme Court ruled in Coeur Alaska, Inc. v. Southeast Alaska Conservation Council that the United States EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers could interpret the Clean Water Act to exempt water pollution sources from pollution control requirements if the pollution was accompanied by fill material. This legal feat was accomplished because the […]

Matt Shudtz | June 22, 2009

Medical Device Safety: FDA Can’t Do It Alone

While his colleagues (and former colleagues) jockey for the healthcare reform limelight, Rep. Frank Pallone is quietly busy making sure that, regardless of who pays for healthcare, the sick and injured will have safe and effective solutions to their problems. Last Thursday, Rep. Pallone held a hearing to assess FDA’s ability to properly oversee the […]

Holly Doremus | June 19, 2009

The End of the Exxon Valdez Legal Saga?

Cross posted by permission from Legal Planet. Rick earlier posted about the 20th anniversary of the Exxon Valdez oil spill. This week, the Ninth Circuit may finally have brought the litigation that followed that spill to a close. You may recall that last year the U.S. Supreme Court heard Exxon’s challenge to the punitive damages […]

Ben Somberg | June 19, 2009

The Heartland Institute’s Shifting Statements

Andrew Freedman of washingtonpost.com’s Capital Weather Gang has a nifty catch: the Heartland Institute, the people cluttering up my newspaper this week with climate-change-denying ads, have officially changed tack on their lobbying policy. Back in March, the group told Freedman: “Our purpose is to bring scientists, economists, and policy experts together to address issues overlooked […]

Ben Somberg | June 18, 2009

Saving the Chesapeake Bay: Time to Hold the States Accountable

Today CPR releases Reauthorizing the Chesapeake Bay Program: Exchanging Promises for Results (press release, full report). For years, the jurisdictions within the Chesapeake Bay watershed (the states and Washington D.C.) have essentially not faced consequences for failing to meet pollution-reduction targets. It’s not surprising that the Chesapeake Bay has languished. What the new CPR report […]