Testimony
of Jason Barbose, Global Warming Advocate,
Environment California Research & Policy Center
Regulations
to Control Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Motor Vehicles; Request for Waiver of
Preemption Under Clean Air Act Section 209(b),
DOCKET ID: EPA-HQ-OAR-2006- 0173
May 30, 2007
My
name is Jason Barbose and I am a Global Warming Advocate at Environment
California Research &
Policy Center. We are a statewide citizen-based
environmental advocacy organization that represents approximately 70,000 Californians.
Thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak today on this urgent
matter.
Theextraordinary and compelling risks global warming poses to California require immediate and
well-reasoned solutions. As such, it is
with great purpose that state officials in California
have taken action to cut global warming pollution, and with great urgency that
we ask the EPA to grant California’s
waiver request for greenhouse gas emissions standards for motor vehicles.
Scientists
worldwide are sounding alarm bells about the consequences of global
warming. This year the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) is
releasing the current state of climate science after a rigorous multi-year
process that included extensive review by scientists and governments worldwide,
including the United States. The IPCC found that the evidence of global warming is “unequivocal” and that it is very likely (greater than 90 percent probability) that human activities
– primarily the burning of fossil fuels – are responsible for most of the observed
increase in global average temperature since the mid-20th century.
For
years scientists and government officials have done extensive research in California about the
particular threats global warming poses to our state’s environment, public
health, and economy. They have found that
the challenges are tremendous:
o
In
California we
are always at risk of drought, but studies show global warming could nearly drain
our Sierra snowpack, depleting water supplies for both people and
agriculture.
o
In
California, we already suffer from the worst
air quality in the nation, but global warming could increase by 75% the number
of days conducive to smog formation in the San Joaquin
Valley and Los Angeles basin.
o
In
California,
we are home to an amazing array of natural environments unmatched in any other
state, and yet global warming could dramatically alter these important
ecological systems.
The good
news is that the IPCC has also concluded that we can avoid or reduce many of
these impacts if we quickly and significantly reduce global warming
pollution. More precisely, we need to
reduce global warming emissions from today’s levels by the end of this decade,
by at least 15-20% by 2020, and by at least 80% by 2050 in order to avoid the
worst impacts of global warming.
Unfortunately,
the facts show we have been on an alternate trajectory. Global warming emissions rose 17% nationwide
between 1990 and 2005, and by nearly the same rate in California. A large part of this emissions increase is
attributable to cars and light trucks. The
transportation sector accounts for over 40% of greenhouse gas emissions
statewide, with carbon
dioxide emissions from motor gasoline consumption increasing 15 percent in California between 1990
and 2004, from 111 million metric tons to 128 million metric tons.
In seeing
the compelling need to cut global warming pollution, the extraordinary
consequences of failing to do so, and the major contribution that cars and SUVs
make to the problem, California
officials made a rational response. They
undertook a multi-year process that included careful and measured technical
review and public input to create first-in-the-nation standards to cut global
warming pollution from cars and light trucks.
California’s greenhouse gas
standards for motor vehicles would require new cars to emit 34% less global
warming pollution on average in 2016, and light trucks 25% less. The standards
can be met with technology already in the market and will save vehicle owners
in lower maintenance and operating costs over the lifetimes of the
vehicle. The standards give automakers
flexibility to apply any technology they choose to reduce global warming
emissions, including production of vehicles that use lower carbon fuels.
Since
2004, 11 other states have adopted the California
tailpipe emissions standards. Together
these states account for more than one-third of the U.S. auto market. According to Environment California analysis,
by 2020 the cumulative emissions reductions achieved in these 12 states will be
equivalent to taking 74 million of today’s cars off the road for an entire
year.[vii] This is a big dent in the emissions
reductions we need to avoid the worst effects of global warming.
Unfortunately,
without the EPA’s stamp of approval, California
and these 11 states will not be able to take this important step toward
cutting
global warming pollution from tailpipes.
Fortunately, California’s
standards were carefully crafted to meet the various criteria for a
waiver of
preemption under the Clean Air Act. The
standards are obviously as protective of public health and welfare as
federal
standards because the federal government has refused to set any global
warming
emission standards for vehicles. The
standards meet compelling and extraordinary conditions California faces
from climate change. In all, the standards are consistent with the
Clean Air Act, given the wealth of evidence that they are
technologically
feasible and that the required test procedures are consistent with
EPA’s
requirements.
Global
warming demands immediate action at the local, state and federal levels. Given the risks, it is grossly irresponsible
for the federal government to reject limits on global warming pollution, but it
is unconscionable for EPA to stand in the way of state action and leadership. On behalf of Environment California, I
respectfully urge the EPA to grant California’s
waiver request and remove the current roadblock to cleaner cars.
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, Climate Change 2007: The Physical
Science Basis, Summary for Policymakers, February 2007, 4.
[iii] California
Climate Change
Center, Our Changing Climate: Assessing the Risks to California, 2006, 5.
[iv] Department of Energy, Energy Information
Administration, Emissions of Greenhouse
Gases in the United States 2005, November 2006, ix; California Energy
Commission, Inventory of California
Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks: 1990 – 2004, October 2006
[v] California
Energy Commission, Inventory of California Greenhouse
Gas Emissions and Sinks: 1990 – 2004, October 2006.
[vi] Environment California
Research & Policy Center, The Carbon Boom: State and National Trends in Carbon Dioxide Emissions
Since 1990, April 2007.
[vii] Environment California
Research & Policy Center, The Clean Cars Program: How States are Driving Cuts in Global Warming
Pollution, May 2007.