On the last day of its term, the Supreme Court handed down a case no less impactful than its shameful ruling a week earlier that overturned Roe v. Wade. In West Virginia v. EPA, the courtās right-wing members confirmed they are in the pockets of the fossil fuel companies. The 6-3 majority sided with coal companies and Republican-led states to restrain the Environmental Protection Agencyās (EPA) power to regulate carbon emissions.
āCapping carbon dioxide emissions at a level that will force a nationwide transition away from the use of coal to generate electricity may be a sensible āsolution to the crisis of the day,āā Chief Justice John Roberts wrote on behalf of himself, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett. But āit is not plausible that Congress gave EPA the authority to adopt on its own such a regulatory scheme.ā
This frightening decision could preempt new regulations the Biden administrationās EPA is developing to fight climate change. It will be nearly impossible for President Joe Biden to meet his climate goal that half of all new cars sold in the United States be electric by 2030, and all electricity come from solar, wind and other zero-carbon sources by 2035.
āToday, the Court strips the [EPA] of the power Congress gave it to respond to āthe most pressing environmental challenge of our time,āā Elena Kagan wrote in the dissent joined by Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor.
In 2015, President Barack Obamaās EPA adopted the Clean Power Plan (CPP) to enforce the Clean Air Act. The CPP aimed to combat climate change by reducing carbon emissions from power plants through the ābest system of emissions reductionā ā by shifting the production of electricity to solar, wind power or fracked gas plants. It sought to transition from 38 percent coal to 27 percent coal by 2030. The Supreme Court suspended the implementation of the CPP in 2016 after several states and private plaintiffs challenged the plan.
The Trump administration repealed the CPP in 2019 and replaced it with the Affordable Clean Energy Rule (ACE Rule), a much weaker program. It granted states the ability to set regulations and gave power plants flexibility in complying with them.
Last year, the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit halted both President Donald Trumpās repeal of the CPP and the ACE Rule and sent the case back to the EPA. The appellate court took issue with the Trump administrationās narrow interpretation of the EPAās authority.
On June 30, the Supreme Court reversed the Court of Appealsās ruling. For the first time, the majority specifically used the āmajor questions doctrine,ā which requires that Congress clearly spell out the powers of an administrative agency to make ādecisions of vast economic and political significance.ā
The court however, has increasingly utilized the rationale of the āmajor questions doctrineā without using those words, recently reversing the Biden administrationās attempts to tackle the COVID-19 pandemic.
In an unsigned majority opinion that denied the authority of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to stop evictions, the court stated, āWe expect Congress to speak clearly when authorizing an agency to exercise powers of vast economic and political significance.ā
And the court struck down a rule promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to mandate vaccines or periodic testing of employees in large companies. Gorsuch wrote in a concurring opinion in that case, āThe agency claims the power to force 84 million Americans to receive a vaccine or undergo regular testing. By any measure, that is a claim of power to resolve a question of vast national significance. Yet Congress has nowhere clearly assigned so much power to OSHA.ā
Kagan wrote in dissent in the EPA case that Congress ābroadly authorized EPAā to choose the āābest system of emission reductionā for power plantsā¦. The ābest system,ā full stop ā no ifs, ands, or buts of any kind relevant here.ā She noted that the parties didnāt dispute that the EPAās method āis indeed the ābest systemā ā the most effective and efficient way to reduce power plantsā carbon dioxide emissions.ā
āWhatever else this Court may know about, it does not have a clue about how to address climate change,ā Kagan wrote. āAnd letās say the obvious: The stakes here are high. Yet the Court today prevents congressionally authorized agency action to curb power plantsā carbon dioxide emissions.ā She adds, āThe Court appoints itself ā instead of Congress or the expert agency ā the decisionmaker on climate policy. I cannot think of many things more frightening.ā
Kagan cites the likelihood that, āIf the current rate of emissions continues, children born this year could live to see parts of the Eastern seaboard swallowed by the ocean.ā She cautions, āRising waters, scorching heat, and other severe weather conditions could force āmass migration events[,] political crises, civil unrest,ā and āeven state failure.āā
EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan responded to the courtās ruling: āAt this moment, when the impacts of the climate crisis are becoming ever more disruptive, costing billions of dollars every year from floods, wildfires, droughts and sea level rise, and jeopardizing the safety of millions of Americans, the Courtās ruling is disheartening.ā
Fewer than half the states have passed substantial climate change policies. California leads the country in requiring that by 2035, all new cars sold there be electric or zero-emission. Seventeen other states are slated to follow suit. By 2045, 100 percent of electricity in California must be generated from zero carbon sources. Twenty-one additional states have clean electricity requirements and others are considering even stricter standards.
In her dissent, Kagan pointed out that the majority opinion and particularly Gorsuchās concurrence are suffused with an āanti-administrative-stateā analysis. Indeed, when Gorsuch was nominated to the Supreme Court, the nonprofit group Alliance for Justice warned of the danger of Gorsuchās practice of second-guessing agency experts: āIt is difficult to overstate the damage [Gorsuchās] position would cause. Judge Gorsuch would tie the hands of precisely those entities that Congress has recognized have the depth and experience to enforce critical laws, safeguard essential protections, and ensure the safety of the American people.ā
The courtās decision sends an ominous signal that it will use the major questions doctrine to strike down other regulations that limit corporate profits. It could restrict the ability of federal agencies to regulate workplace safety, health care, product safety, water protections, vehicle safety, telecommunications and the financial sector.
By eliminating the constitutional right to abortion, and curtailing the authority of the EPA to halt climate disruption, the conservative members of the court have proven they are loyal foot soldiers in the right wingās 50-year crusade to create a capitalist theocracy.
With the right-wing majority entrenched on the high court, we can expect to see future rulings affirming fewer regulations on industry and more regulation of personal privacy rights.
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