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The New York
Times - April 6, 2004 - By PAUL KRUGMAN
If you want
a single example that captures why so many people no longer believe in
the good intentions of the Bush administration, look at the case of mercury
pollution.
Mercury can
damage the nervous system, especially in fetuses and infants which
is why the Food and Drug Administration warns pregnant women and nursing
mothers against consuming types of fish, like albacore tuna, that often
contain high mercury levels. About 8 percent of American women have more
mercury in their bloodstreams than the Environmental Protection Agency
considers safe.
During the
1990's, government regulation greatly reduced mercury emissions from medical
and municipal waste incineration, leaving power plants as the main problem.
In 2000, the E.P.A. determined that mercury is a hazardous substance as
defined by the Clean Air Act, which requires that such substances be strictly
controlled. E.P.A. staff estimated that enforcing this requirement would
lead to a 90 percent reduction in power-plant mercury emissions by 2008.
A few months ago, however, the Bush administration reversed this determination
and proposed a "cap and trade" system for mercury that it claimed
would lead to a 70 percent reduction by 2018. Other estimates suggest
that the reduction would be smaller, and take longer.
For some pollutants, setting a cap on total emissions, while letting polluters
buy and sell emission rights, is a cost-efficient way to reduce pollution.
The cap-and-trade system for sulfur dioxide, which causes acid rain, has
been a big success. But the science clearly shows that cap-and-trade is
inappropriate for mercury.
Sulfur dioxide is light, and travels long distances: power plants in the
Midwest can cause acid rain in Maine. So a cap on total national emissions
makes sense. Mercury is heavy: much of it precipitates to the ground near
the source. As a result, coal-fired power plants in states like Pennsylvania
and Michigan create "hot spots" chemical Chernobyls
where the risks of mercury poisoning are severe. Under a cap-and-trade
system, these plants are likely to purchase pollution rights rather than
cut emissions. In other words, the administration proposal would perpetuate
mercury pollution where it does the most harm. That probably means thousands
of children born with preventable neurological problems.
So how did the original plan get replaced with a plan so obviously wrong
on the science?
The answer is that the foxes have been put in charge of the henhouse.
The head of the E.P.A.'s Office of Air and Radiation, like most key environmental
appointees in the Bush administration, previously made his living representing
polluting industries (which, in case you haven't guessed, are huge Republican
donors). On mercury, the administration didn't just take industry views
into account, it literally let the polluters write the regulations: much
of the language of the administration's proposal came directly from lobbyists'
memos.
E.P.A. experts normally study regulations before they are issued, but
they were bypassed. According to The Los Angeles Times: "E.P.A. staffers
say they were told not to undertake the normal scientific and economic
studies called for under a standing executive order. . . . E.P.A. veterans
say they cannot recall another instance where the agency's technica
Mercury is just a particularly vivid example of what's going on in environmental
protection, and public policy in general. As a devastating article in
Sunday's New York Times Magazine documented, the administration's rollback
of the Clean Air Act has gone beyond the polluters' wildest dreams.
And the corruption of the policy process in which political appointees
come in with a predetermined agenda, and technical experts who might present
information their superiors don't want to hear are muzzled has
infected every area I know anything about, from tax cuts to matters of
war and peace.
A Yawngate update: CNN called me to insist that despite what it first
said, the administration really, truly wasn't responsible for the network's
claim that David Letterman's embarrassing video of a Bush speech was a
fake. I still don't understand why the network didn't deny White House
involvement until it retracted the charge. But the main point of Friday's
column was to highlight the way CNN facilitated crude administration smears
of Richard Clarke.
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