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Vitter, Inhofe: Ozone Rule Needs Cost-Benefit Analysis Before Being Suggested

Category: Government Committees
Type: News
Source: U.S. Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works
Party: Republican
Date: Thursday, November 20th, 2014

U.S. Senator David Vitter (R-La.), top Republican on the Environment and Public Works Committee, and Senator Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.), today sent a letter to Howard Shelanski, Administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) in the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). In the letter, the Senators request that OIRA ensures that the E.P.A. (EPA) does not proceed with proposing a revised ozone national ambient air quality standard (NAAQS) until the Agency has 1st received and considered a comprehensive cost-benefit analysis from the Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC).

"By any measure, the revised ozone rule will represent one of the costliest rules ever issued by EPA, and the process has been anything but thorough and transparent," Vitter said. "It will serve as one of the most devastating regulations in a series of over-reaching regulatory actions taken by this Administration. Yet, we are now just days from the scheduled suggestion date for the revised ozone standard, and there's no evidence that E.P.A. or CASAC intends to follow the law, which includes providing a comprehensive cost-benefit analysis of a lower standard."

"The Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee consciously ignored the Clean Air Act's strict statutory instruction to advise the Administrator on the significant negative economic impact of lowering the ozone standard," said Inhofe. "This action demonstrates a political move with obvious vested interest in advancing an environmentalist agenda over following the law. President Obama decided to halt a similar regulation in 2011 due to high costs and stifling effects on the U.S. businesses. My colleagues and I hope President Obama will take the same action this time around."

CASAC has not conducted the required analysis of "any adverse public health, welfare, social, economic, or energy effects, which may result from various strategies for attainment and maintenance of" a new ozone standard.

Because of a closed door sue-and-settle deal with far-left environmental groups led by the Sierra Club, E.P.A. is under a court-mandated deadline to propose the revised ozone NAAQS by December 1, 2014. The potential impacts of a lower ozone standard include a reduction in GDP of $270 billion per year and lost jobs averaging 2.9 million per year. In addition, a lower ozone standard will result in increased natural gas and electricity costs for American families and manufacturers.

Vitter has been urging CASAC and E.P.A. in a series of letters to conduct the ozone NAAQS review process in a transparent manner, including the need to address error corrections and risk data errors in the scientific assessments used. In August, Vitter held 2 field briefings in Louisiana to analyze the potential impacts of the current review of the ozone NAAQS. Click here to read more.

Click here to read Sens. Vitter and Inhofe's letter.

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