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SCotUS to decide global warming case....

N8 v2.0

Not the sharpest tool in the shed
Oct 18, 2002
11,003
149
The Cleft of Venus
:hot:


US court to rule on pivotal case on global warming
Jun 26 4:17 PM US/Eastern


The US Supreme Court decided it will weigh whether the federal government must regulate emissions of new cars to combat global warming as demanded by environmental groups and some state and city authorities.

The case could open the way for the high court to deliver a crucial ruling on how the US government enforces environmental laws.

Since 2003, 12 US states, several cities and a dozen environmental groups have waged a legal battle against the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which has chosen not to curb greenhouse emissions on new cars.

The EPA maintains that the federal Clean Air Act does not address global climate change and that carbon dioxide is not defined as a pollutant under the law. The administration of President George W. Bush has advocated voluntary controls instead of mandatory limits on emissions.

The plaintiffs in the suit, which include the states of California, Massachusetts and New York, argue that the Clean Air Act obliges the EPA to regulate emissions from cars and power plants such as carbon dioxide and three other gases linked to global warming.

Carbon dioxide and similar emissions are believed to trap heat in the earth's atmosphere, causing global temperatures to rise.

A federal appeals court in Washington ruled in July 2005 that the EPA's policy was justified, saying the agency was not legally required to regulate causes of global warming and that scientific evidence was lacking to support such measures.

In papers filed with the Supreme Court, the US government called the lawsuit "speculative" as it remained unclear if global warming could be traced to emissions from new cars and even if the link was proven, it was not clear that requiring more fuel efficient cars would have a major impact on climate change.

The issue of global warming could be better addressed through international efforts supported by the United States, the government said.

The case will have a "far-reaching" effect on the US approach to global warming, according to the environmental group Sierra Club.

"The Bush administration has continually tried to say that it's not their job to fight global warming. In fact, they have both the legal and moral responsibility to tackle global warming pollution," David Bookbinder, senior attorney for the Sierra Club, said in a statement.
 

BurlyShirley

Rex Grossman Will Rise Again
Jul 4, 2002
19,180
17
TN
Doesnt hurt my feelings any. As costs go up to do be more enviro freindly tho, we can say goodbye to detroit.
 

ohio

The Fresno Kid
Nov 26, 2001
6,649
26
SF, CA
I'm confused by the statement that the Environmental Protection Agency is not required to regulate causes of global warming. I may be wrong, but isn't global warming something that happens to the environment?
 

Changleen

Paranoid Member
Jan 9, 2004
14,919
2,886
Pōneke
Still with the get-out-clause language:

"Carbon dioxide and similar emissions are believed to trap heat in the earth's atmosphere, causing global temperatures to rise."

Lame.