EPA Petitioned to Limit Greenhouse Gases From Ships
LOS ANGELES, California, October 5, 2007 (ENS) - Citing the 'threat of global climate disruption,' California Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. today joined three national environmental organizations in petitioning the United States Environmental Protection Agency to adopt strict greenhouse gas regulations for ocean-going vessels. The petition asks the EPA to make specific findings that ships contribute to global warming.
At a news conference at the attorney general's headquarters in Los Angeles Tuesday, Brown said, 'The U.S. EPA has the authority to curb greenhouse gas emissions and our petition today asks the agency to exercise that authority without delay.'
Brown joins Oceana, Friends of the Earth and the Center for Biological Diversity in petitioning the federal agency to act.
They want the EPA to make a finding that carbon dioxide emissions from ocean-going vessels such as cargo and cruise ships contribute to air pollution and endanger human health and welfare.
And they are asking that the EPA set standards for reducing such carbon dioxide emissions.
The petitions begin the process of imposing mandatory regulations on the marine transportation sector. The petitioners asked the EPA to respond within 180 days.
Ocean-going vessels, in total, emit more CO2 emissions than any nation in the world except the U.S., Russia, China, Japan, India and Germany, said Brown. 'Ominously, these emissions are projected to increase nearly 75 percent during the next 20 years.'
'International law guarantees a right of ‘innocent passage' for all ocean-going vessels, but this right does not include polluting the air or water near our coastal cities,' Brown said. 'If the U.S. is to do its part in reducing the threat of global climate disruption, then EPA must limit the global warming emissions from ships that enter the ports of the United States.'
Under the Clean Air Act, California has the authority to file a petition asking the EPA to establish standards for the emission of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas known to trap the Sun's heat close to the Earth.
Brown said that under the reasoning of the United States Supreme Court's holding in Massachusetts v. EPA earlier this year, the Environmental Protection Agency has the authority to adopt standards for greenhouse gas emissions from vessels that enter U.S. territorial waters.
The United Nations International Maritime Organization, IMO, has authority under international treaties to establish pollution standards for vessels but to date has failed to adopt controls on greenhouse gas emissions.
At a recent meeting of the IMO Marine Environment Protection Committee, it was agreed to inventory greenhouse gases by 2009, but no commitment was made to regulate such emissions.
'Climate change is threatening ocean life from the Arctic to the tropics,' said Dr. Michael Hirshfield, Oceana's chief scientist and senior vice president for North America. 'Shipping pollution has been given a free pass so far and it's way past time to fix that.'
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