Monday, September 28, 2015

House Votes To Keep EPA From Considering Costs Of Climate Disruption

http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2015/09/27/3705860/social-cost-of-carbon-must-remain-uncalculated/

by Samantha Page Sep 27, 2015

Climate change costs an incredible amount of money. Whether it is deaths during heat waves, reconstruction after a superstorm, or even lost revenues at ski slopes, rising temperatures and increased extreme weather events are costing the economy. In fact, Citibank reported earlier this year that it will cost $44 trillion worldwide by 2060 to mitigate the costs of climate change under the business as usual scenario.

But efforts to include those costs in permitting projects just took another hit, when the House voted to pass the RAPID Act, a bill intended to streamline permitting processes. Tucked into the bill is language that will prohibit the Environmental Protection Agency from considered the social cost of carbon during permitting.

The bill, which passed largely down party lines Friday afternoon, specifically prohibits federal agencies from following draft guidance from the White House Council on Environmental Quality for “consideration of greenhouse gas emissions and the effects of climate change” in environmental reviews. Further, under the RAPID Act, any permit request that is not addressed by the agency deadline will be automatically approved.

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In the final tally, no Republicans voted against the bill. Democrats Brad Ashford (NE), Dixon Bishop (GA), Jim Costa (CA), Henry Cuellar (TX), Ruben Hinojosa (TX), Collin Peterson (MN), and Kurt Schrader (OR) voted for the bill.

The White House has said the president will veto the RAPID Act.

“Everyone knows that climate change is urgent,” Rep. Alan Lowenthal (D-CA) told ThinkProgress in an email. “The Pope knows, our young people know, even China knows, but this House is unfortunately one of the last bastions of irresponsible inaction. The clock is ticking and too many in the majority don’t get it.”

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