The federal government’s policy on climate change, the EPA’s Clean Power Plan (CPP) and the Agency’s Clean Energy (ACE) proposal, its proposed CPP replacement; the EPA’s CO2 emissions and energy-efficiency standards for cars; the partial shutdown of the federal government; the EPA’s renewable fuel standard (RFS) and E-15; its newly proposed definition of the Waters of the United States (WOTUS); and enforcement—all these and more were discussed at the nomination hearing of Andrew Wheeler, the EPA’s current acting administrator, and President Trump’s choice to be the Agency’s next full-time administrator.
Timing of the hearing
Convened by Senator John Barrasso (R-WY), chair of the Senate’s Environment and Public Works Committee (EPW), only 1 week after the president formally submitted Wheeler’s name for the position, the hearing was notable for concerns voiced by Democrats that Wheeler’s confirmation was being inappropriately rushed while 14,000 EPA employees are on furlough, and the Agency is not performing critical functions. The point was made by Senator Tom Carper (D-DE), EPW’s ranking member.
“I don’t believe that giving the Acting Administrator a speedy promotion is more urgent and important than protecting the public from contamination to our air and water and lands,” said Carper. “Our priorities should be reopening our government, certainly reopening EPA and the other closed federal agencies.”
Wheeler said that he was looking forward to all furloughed staff returning to work, adding that even with only 891 EPA employees currently on the job, the Agency was responding to emergencies and working to complete all court-ordered rulemaking deadlines. Also, EPA staff were still participating in recovery from the California wildfires and the Puerto Rico hurricane, said Wheeler, who added that since the shutdown, the Agency has responded to seven new emergencies around the country and continues to monitor the EPA’s hotline and tips lines.
Experience not lacking
Several Republicans on the committee emphasized Wheeler’s 4 years of experience with the EPA’s Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics, his first job out of law school, and 14 additional years working in various positions with the EPW. Should he be approved by the Senate, Wheeler and Stephen Johnson would be the only career EPA employees to fill the administrator’s role. Johnson served under President George W. Bush from January 2005 to January 2009.
Climate change a heated topic
Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) was among several Democrats who quizzed Wheeler forcefully and almost entirely on climate change. Wheeler told Sanders that he believed climate change was real and that human activity was influencing it. However, when Sanders asked if Wheeler believes that climate change is a global crisis that must be addressed in an aggressive way, Wheeler hedged.
“I would not call it the greatest crisis,” answered Wheeler. “I consider it a huge issue that must be addressed globally.”
When pressed by Sanders about what the EPA was actually doing, Wheeler pointed to the Agency’s proposed ACE rule, the vehicle standards, and its methane program. Sanders persisted, asking if, as the world’s largest economy, the United States would assume world leadership on climate change and influence how other nations, including China and India, reduced their greenhouse gas emissions (GHG). Wheeler responded that the EPA would implement the laws passed by Congress and had no comment on world leadership.
Pressed by Senator Jeff Merkley (D-OR) about where he stood on a scale of 1 (not concerned) to 10 (most concerned) about the effects of climate change, Wheeler responded “8 or 9.”
WOTUS proposal
Wheeler was particularly enthusiastic about the Agency’s proposed replacement definition of WOTUS. According to some Republican lawmakers, no rule issued under the Obama EPA concerned landowners more deeply than the 2015 definition.
“The overarching guiding principle that I gave the staff in crafting the WOTUS rule was that I believe any property owner should be able to stand on his or her property and be able to tell for themselves whether or not they have waters of the U.S. on their property without having to hire an outside consultant or an attorney,” said Wheeler.
CPP replacement rule
Regarding the proposed ACE, which would affect GHG emissions from fossil fuel power plants, Wheeler said the proposal was comparable to the CPP in terms of lowered CO2 emissions and, when fully implemented, would achieve a 34 percent reduction when compared to 2005 levels. According to Wheeler, reductions under the CPP would have been about 35 percent.
“Your own agency says it will result in 3.5 percent higher CO2 production by 2030 than the Clean Power Plan,” countered Senator Merkley. “Why did you come to my office and tell me it is the same when your agency experts say it will produce a lot more carbon dioxide?”
“My agency experts have told me that we are going to get a 34 percent reduction in CO2 based on 2005 levels once the ACE regulation is fully implemented,” repeated Wheeler.
Other comments
- Several Midwestern Senators, Republicans and Democrats, wanted to know how the shutdown was affecting the Agency’s work on issuing a proposal to allow year-round use of E-15 (gasoline with 85 percent petroleum and 15 percent ethanol). President Trump has endorsed the use of E-15, which is fiercely opposed by the petroleum industry. Wheeler said the proposal is not being worked on during the shutdown, but he hopes it will be issued by February and that a final rule will be in place in time for summer 2019.
- Regarding the Agency’s apparent efforts to modify the power plant Mercury Air Toxics Standards (MATS), Wheeler said that emissions controls required by the rule have been adopted by power plants and that the Agency has no intention of requiring any facility to remove or disable those controls.
- Wheeler said the EPA is actively working to finish its lead dust rule by June, a court-ordered deadline.
- According to Wheeler, the Agency has been particularly successful in accelerating the Superfund program. In fiscal year (FY) 2018, the EPA deleted all or part of 22 sites from the National Priorities List, the largest number of deletions in 1 year since FY 2005, said Wheeler.
- Democrats were highly critical of what they characterize as the Agency’s retreat on emissions standards for autos. Wheeler countered by noting that the federal Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) proposal will decrease the cost of a new car by $2,300. “That will get older cars off the road,” Wheeler said. “And when you get an older car off the road, people are buying safer cars and it will save 1,000 lives a year. I think that is a very important fact to get out there in the public.”
- Wheeler also had a prepared response to counter a recent report by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) that said the Agency was making record-low criminal referrals to the Department of Justice. “We don’t actually make criminal referrals,” said Wheeler. “We make requests for prosecutorial assistance. And at the Agency, the metric that we use is to track the number of new criminal enforcement cases that open each year. Last year, we opened more criminal enforcement cases than in 2017. That reversed a downward trend that started in 2011. So, since 2011, we have been on a steady decline. Last year, we reversed the decline for the first time.”
A transcript of Wheeler’s EPW nomination hearing is available here.