ATTORNEY GENERAL JAMES CONDEMNS TRUMP’S DANGEROUS POLICY OF IGNORING CLIMATE CHANGE

[Environment\Climate Change]
NY AG James: “Despite insurmountable evidence on the contrary, the Trump Administration continues to deny the existence of climate change, and in the process, continues to put the health and safety of Americans at risk.”
Photo: Wikimedia Commons

NY AG James denounces the climate denying Trump White House which is seeking to revoke a greenhouse gas directive from Obama Administration.

New York Attorney General Letitia James today joined a coalition of 19 Attorneys General in filing a comment letter opposing the Council of Environmental Quality’s (CEQ) draft guidance on consideration of greenhouse gas emissions under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).

NEPA serves as the cornerstone of America’s environmental regulatory framework and requires agencies to consider environmental impacts, including greenhouse gas emissions and the effects of climate change, as part of their decision-making process. The requirement to consider greenhouse gas emissions and climate change that the Trump Administration is now attempting to revoke was the result of guidance issued by the Obama Administration in 2016. In the comment letter, the coalition asserts that the Trump Administration’s draft guidance encourages agencies to violate NEPA and is arbitrary and capricious.

“Despite insurmountable evidence on the contrary, the Trump Administration continues to deny the existence of climate change, and in the process, continues to put the health and safety of Americans at risk,” said Attorney General Letitia James. “The proposal to subvert one of our nation’s core environmental protection laws – the National Environmental Policy Act – by gutting environmental review of the harms of climate change would severely harm both the public and the environment in our country. My office is committed to fighting back against this and other efforts by the Trump Administration to deny climate change and its increasing toll on our families and our communities.”

Enacted in 1969, NEPA is one of the nation’s foremost environmental statutes. NEPA requires that before any federal agency undertakes a “major federal action significantly affecting the quality of the human environment,” it must consider the environmental impacts of the proposed action, alternatives to the action, and any available mitigation measures. Nearly every federal action, from the approval of significant energy and infrastructure projects to key decisions concerning the management of federal public lands, requires compliance with NEPA.

In the comment letter, the coalition asserts that the guidance encourages agencies to violate NEPA, is arbitrary and capricious, and should be withdrawn. The draft guidance moves in the wrong direction, muddying the waters on the analysis of climate change impacts under NEPA and creating new legal risks for projects subject to NEPA. The letter outlines a number of concerns, including that the draft guidance:

*Unlawfully and arbitrarily ignores the growing body of scientific evidence pointing to the threats of climate change, and the contribution of greenhouse gas emissions to this threat;

*Subverts the purpose and requirement of NEPA to promote informed decision-making, by disregarding climate change, the most pressing environmental issue of our time;

*Fails to clarify how agencies should consider indirect greenhouse gas emissions, including upstream or downstream emissions caused by projects such as pipelines and mining;

*Includes vague and undefined terms that would allow agencies to unlawfully cast aside their obligations under NEPA and that conflict with the straightforward language of the previous 2016 guidance;

*Unlawfully suggests that agencies may meet NEPA requirements by comparing projects’ greenhouse gas emissions to other estimates and providing a qualitative summary discussion, which is insufficient;

*Supports an unbalanced approach to cost-benefit analysis by allowing agencies to exclude the costs or quantities of climate impacts;

*Discourages a consideration of required mitigation methods as well as the exploration of reasonable alternatives to reduce climate change; and

*Fails to consider coordination and consistency between NEPA and state environmental analysis.

Attorney General James joins the coalition led by California Attorney General Xavier, which includes the attorneys general of Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Mexico, New Jersey, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and the District of Columbia.