This Memorial Day weekend, boaters, swimmers, fishers and others will flock to the Chesapeake Bay to mark the traditional, if not quite calendrically accurate, beginning of summer. They'll bring their wallets with them, of course, thus supporting businesses and and jobs up and down the Bay. After a day in, on or near the water, many of them will tuck into a meal of crabcakes, made from blue crabs harvested in the Bay.
Recreation and commerce are two of the most important uses of the Bay, and certainly the best known. But another use, less advertised and far less understood, is as a dumping ground for pollution. Some of that pollution comes from rainwater runoff from roads and other hard surfaces, carrying motor oil and other substances into the Bay. Some comes from overfertilized lawns. And a significant chunk, including 44 percent of the Bay's load of nitrogen and phosphorous, the most worrisome pollutants, comes from agriculture. That includes concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) in the region, as well as largely unregulated crop farms whose fertilizer runs off into Bay tributaries.
Despite the huge importance to the region of a healthy Bay, the simple truth is that human activity is endangering it. Already, the Bay experiences "dead zones," as a result. The stop-start, but mostly stopped, effort to clean up the Bay over the last quarter century has accomplished little, and EPA leadership -- at least until 2009 -- was conspicuously absent.
But the Obama Administration has taken a lead role in the effort to clean up the Bay, recently issuing a Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) for the Bay, essentially a pollution diet for the six states and the District of Columiba -- the jurisdcitions with land that drains into it. In order to meet those requirements, the states are contemplating creating a water quality trading regime, essentially a market to buy and sell permits to pollute. The idea is that because some polluters have an easier time cutting emissions than others, a trading regime will reduce pollution by incentivizing sellers of credits to maximize their pollution savings -- at a profit.
The idea is particularly popular with fans of "market-based approaches" to environmental regulation. Ironically, it's the same concept that conservatives so vilified when it was proposed as a way to go after climate-change-inducing carbon emissions. But now, faced with the prospect of meaningful pollution limits that will actually be enforced, conservatives are back on board the trading train.
In a briefing paper, issued Friday, May 25, CPR's Rena Steinzor, Nick Vidargas, Shana Jones, and Yee Huang warn of many possible pitfalls awaiting a water quality trading regime. In particular, they note that such an approach has been tried elsewhere and failed, in many cases because unregulated polluters have had no incentive to participate. The paper says that a trading regime could work only if the following issues are successfully addressed:
Accountability: Water Quality Trading in the Chesapeake Bay makes an additional point: The standard for success with a trading regime cannot be political or ideological. It is not a success if Democrats and Republicans agree on a regime and enact it. It's a success if, and only if, it makes real progress cleaning up the Bay. If it doesn't work, it should go, say the authors of the report.
Read the report , or read more about CPR's Chesapeake Bay work.
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Matthew Freeman | May 25, 2012
This Memorial Day weekend, boaters, swimmers, fishers and others will flock to the Chesapeake Bay to mark the traditional, if not quite calendrically accurate, beginning of summer. They’ll bring their wallets with them, of course, thus supporting businesses and and jobs up and down the Bay. After a day in, on or near the water, […]
Daniel Farber | May 24, 2012
Following is the first of two Dan Farber blog entries reposted today from LegalPlanet. Bureaucrats aren’t very popular. But consider the alternatives when it comes to dealing with environmental problems. Basically, bureaucrats are part of the executive branch of government. For instance, the head of EPA is appointed by the President and can be removed […]
Daniel Farber | May 24, 2012
The The following is the second of two Dan Farber blog entries reposted today from LegalPlanet. The key to understanding the economics of environmental protection is the concept of externalities. An externality is simply a cost that one person or firm imposes on another. In general, an externality means that an activity is causing more […]
Robert Verchick | May 21, 2012
The end of the school year always leaves me wishing that I could have lectured more clearly or somehow covered more in my classes on environmental law and policy. There was really just too much to discuss. How does one do justice to all those doubtful arguments in support of the Keystone XL pipeline? It’s […]
Matt Shudtz | May 11, 2012
Two years ago tomorrow, Saturday, EPA sent a seemingly modest idea over to the White House for a quick review. The agency wanted to establish a simple list of “chemicals of concern.” These weren’t chemicals that were necessarily going to be subject to bans or other restrictions, but they present significant enough hazards and are […]
Rena Steinzor | May 10, 2012
President Obama issued the latest salvo in the Administration’s efforts to placate the business community this morning, in the form of a new Executive Order called “Identifying and Reducing Regulatory Burdens.” The Order would expand and enhance the unfunded mandate that would require agencies to scour through the rule books, finding “excessive” rules that would […]
Ben Somberg | May 9, 2012
When the Administration withdrew a rule last month prohibiting young agricultural workers from performing some particularly dangerous tasks, the Department of Labor’s statement didnt’t just say it was tabling the proposal, or reconsidering it, or even starting over from scratch. It went an extra step, adding: “To be clear, this regulation will not be pursued […]
Rena Steinzor | May 8, 2012
Electoral politics or public policy? Policy or politics? One ripe example of how the White House rides herd on health and safety agencies, thinking about politics, not policy to determine what they should do, is provided by the latest poster child for curbing allegedly “excessive rules”: a U.S. Department of Agriculture proposal to take federal […]
Holly Doremus | May 7, 2012
Cross-posted from Legal Planet. You would think that by now federal agencies would have the NEPA process pretty well down. After all, it’s been the law since 1970, requiring that every federal agency prepare an environmental impact statement before committing itself to environmentally harmful actions. And it’s not that hard to do. Agencies just have […]