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- <text id=90TT0937>
- <title>
- Apr. 16, 1990: Scrubbing The Skies
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 16, 1990 Colossal Colliders:Smash!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 20
- Scrubbing the Skies
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>After thirteen years of frustration the Senate finally strikes
- a deal to clean the air--but business lobbies and
- environmentalists are still fighting
- </p>
- <p>By Otto Friedrich--Reported by Glenn Garelik and Hays Gorey/
- Washington
- </p>
- <p> Compromise never comes easily in battles over the
- environment. It is simpler and more gratifying for everyone to
- denounce the opposition as fanatical or corrupt or under the
- control of sinister interests. So it seemed a bit of a miracle
- last week when the Senate approved broad new legislation
- against air pollution, the first since 1977, and the House
- Energy and Commerce Committee reported out a similar bill two
- days later. Both advocates and enemies of tighter pollution
- controls denounced the new legislation and vowed to fight on,
- but a final Senate-House compromise version is expected to
- reach the White House for signature by early next month. George
- Bush implied approval when he declared after the first vote
- last week, "The Senate bill is a major step forward. We can
- have cleaner air and a growing economy."
- </p>
- <p> A chief architect of the miracle was the quiet-spoken Senate
- majority leader, George Mitchell of Maine. Starting during the
- reign of Ronald Reagan, who once professed to believe that some
- air pollution was caused by trees, Mitchell has tried to get
- a clean-air bill into law. After Bush claimed during his
- election campaign that he was a devoted environmentalist,
- Mitchell devised a strategy to hold the President to his
- rhetoric. First he waited for Bush to make his own proposals
- on pollution controls last July. Then he rammed a much tougher
- version through the Senate Environment and Public Works
- Committee. When the White House predictably denounced the
- committee version as too expensive, Mitchell and Administration
- experts went behind closed doors for some hard bargaining.
- </p>
- <p> Most people--73% according to a recent Harris poll--are
- in favor of cleaner air, of course, but there are sharp and
- sincere differences about how much cleaner it needs to be, what
- the cleanup effort will cost and who should pay. Those
- differences pit liberals against conservatives, business groups
- against consumers, and urban office workers against blue-collar
- labor from older industries like mining and auto manufacturing.
- Politically, the strongest divisions pit entire regions
- against one another. The new legislation takes three major
- approaches:
- </p>
- <p>-- Acid rain, which has never been legally controlled, is
- causing serious damage in the Northeast and Canada. The Senate
- and House measures alike require a 50% reduction (about 10
- million tons) from 1980 levels by the end of the year 2000 in
- factories' emissions of sulfur dioxide, which turns rain into
- sulfuric acid. Major reductions are also called for in nitrogen
- oxides (2 million tons by the year 2000 in the Administration
- and House versions, 4 million tons by 2005 in the Senate
- version).
- </p>
- <p> The burden of these reductions would fall most heavily on
- the Appalachian regions that produce high-sulfur coal and the
- 107 Midwestern power plants that burn it. "This bill will
- absolutely devastate my state, leaving nothing but unemployment
- in its path," complained Democratic Senator Alan Dixon of
- Illinois. The Senate version tries to help by offering
- incentives to plants that buy cleanup technology and reduce
- pollution even more than required (they would get credits that
- they could sell to other plants). But the Senate narrowly
- rejected an amendment by former majority leader Robert Byrd of
- West Virginia that would have compensated Appalachian coal
- miners for lost jobs. Byrd then voted against the whole bill.
- </p>
- <p>-- On airborne poisons, which come mainly from chemical and
- industrial dry-cleaning plants, the Environmental Protection
- Agency was authorized in 1970 to control cancer-causing
- compounds with "an ample margin of safety." In fact, it has
- regulated only seven such chemicals. The new bills require it
- to use the "maximum achievable technology" to control some 191
- chemicals. The EPA would then set additional standards to
- reduce remaining health risks.
- </p>
- <p>-- On automobile and truck tail-pipe emissions, the main
- cause of urban smog, the Senate bill calls for a 60% reduction
- in nitrogen oxides and a 22% reduction in hydrocarbons by 1995.
- If eleven of the 27 cities outside California now rated as
- "seriously" polluted fail to meet Government health standards
- between 1999 and 2001, a further 50% cut in those toxic
- emissions would automatically go into effect in 2003. At that
- time carbon monoxide would also be cut 50%. The House Energy
- and Commerce Committee, where Chairman John Dingell of Michigan
- is a powerful voice for the auto industry, voted to permit an
- extra year for the first phase and to let the second phase
- depend on whether the EPA considers it "feasible and
- necessary."
- </p>
- <p> The original Bush proposals also called for production
- between 1997 and 2003 of 1 million cars a year that would run
- on clean fuels, not gasoline. The Senate changed that by
- specifying that oil companies would have to sell "reformulated"
- gasoline only in the nine smoggiest cities, and the House
- leaves it up to the auto manufacturers to certify their
- "capability" of making 1 million alternative-fuel cars.
- </p>
- <p> Determining the cost of all these changes is one big numbers
- game. The White House figures that its original plan would have
- cost an extra $22 billion. Various industry lobbyists, on the
- other hand, estimate the costs of the original Senate bill at
- between $46 billion and $104 billion a year, and they dramatize
- that with estimates of lost jobs, bankrupt industries, ruined
- cities. "I don't think that the congressional bills have passed
- the affordabili ty test," says William Fay, administrator of
- an industrial coalition called the Clean Air Working Group.
- </p>
- <p> Environmentalists have different ways of manipulating
- numbers. Daniel Becker, a Washington official of the Sierra
- Club, cites an American Lung Association estimate that air
- pollution now costs the nation $40 billion to $60 billion a
- year. He also points to a Government study saying that air
- pollution causes 50,000 premature deaths annually. "The way the
- Senate deal came out, it is not a clean-air bill but a
- hold-your-breath bill," says Becker.
- </p>
- <p> As it happened, the Environmental Protection Agency released
- its annual report on urban quality last week, showing that
- pollutants such as lead, sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide and
- soot had decreased dramatically from 1979 to 1988. Even so,
- said EPA administrator William Reilly, "112 million people are
- living in areas still exceeding the smog standards."
- </p>
- <p> These statistics of disease and death give the
- environmentalists' arguments a strongly emotional element. "The
- purpose of the Clean Air Act is to protect public health, not
- merely to make some pollution reductions," says Richard Ayres,
- chairman of the National Clean Air Coalition. "The difference
- is all-important. The Senate deal will reduce pollution; it is
- unlikely to reduce pollution sufficiently to protect public
- health." Or as Becker puts it, "When industry loses, they lose
- a few dollars. When we lose, people die."
- </p>
- <p> Such arguments make it sound as though compromise is in
- itself unacceptable, and Senator Mitchell has been stung by
- some of his critics. "They spend most of their time attacking
- their friends," he says. He calls the compromise bill "a
- tremendous victory for the American people" and adds that
- "without the compromises, there would have been no clean-air
- bill at all in this century." The best things in life are said
- to be free, but by now it is clear that clean air is not one
- of them.
- </p>
- <p>THREE TARGETS FOR CLEANER AIR:
- </p>
- <p>-- URBAN SMOG
- </p>
- <p> By 1995, tail-pipe emissions of hydrocarbons would be
- reduced by 22% and of nitrogen oxides by 60%. Further
- reductions beginning in 2003 could cut both categories and
- carbon monoxide by an additional 50%.
- </p>
- <p>-- AIRBORNE TOXICS
- </p>
- <p> Industry would use the best available technologies between
- 1995 and 2003 to limit the release of 191 chemicals linked to
- cancer and birth defects. The EPA would then set additional
- standards to reduce remaining health risks.
- </p>
- <p>-- ACID RAIN
- </p>
- <p> The bill cuts sulfur dioxide by 1995 and again, with
- nitrogen oxides, by 2000. The deadline stretches to 20005 if
- utilities repower with "clean-coal" technologies. Companies
- that decrease pollution below mandated levels could sell
- credits to others.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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