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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsRed states pump out more carbon pollution than blue ones
http://grist.org/climate-energy/red-states-pump-out-more-carbon-pollution-than-blue-ones/On June 2, the Obama administration unveiled its proposal for the nations first-ever regulations on carbon dioxide emissions from existing power plants. Its a bold and potentially groundbreaking move that has environmentalists, public health advocates, and power plant operators mobilizing their supporters or mounting their defenses.
Each year, electric power plants emit about 2.2 billion tons of carbon dioxide roughly 40 percent of the nations total emissions. If successful, the administrations proposed plan would reduce this sectors emissions to 30 percent below 2005 levels by 2030. While this goal falls a bit short of environmental advocates hopes, it would significantly dent one of the largest sources of carbon emissions from the worlds second-largest producer of greenhouse gases. Many hope that the United States action on this issue will also catalyze the international cooperation needed to address climate change on a global scale.
Critics are certain to challenge the administrations approach in Congress and in court, and have already argued that any climate regulation is an overextension of the Environmental Protection Agencys authority. Of course, the EPA is uniquely positioned to regulate climate pollution. The migratory nature of air pollution and climate change shakes up the borders between state and federal jurisdiction. For instance, a recent Supreme Court case debated and upheld the EPAs ability to require states to limit soot and smog-forming air pollutants that drift into other states. Climate change presents a similar dilemma: Carbon dioxide emissions from a coal plant in Pennsylvania endanger the Florida coastline, regardless of the political and geographic boundaries between them.
But which states are most likely to contest the proposed regulations and why? Despite the flexibility in the regulations targets and tactics, some states may face steeper practical and political challenges than others. A recent review of statewide carbon emissions from the Yale Center for Environmental Law and Policy (YCELP) found that carbon pollution follows party lines. YCELPs maps illustrate the size of red and blue states according to their carbon emissions. Cumulatively and on a state-by-state basis, red states tend to produce more carbon pollution than blue ones, as you can see in this map.
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Red states pump out more carbon pollution than blue ones (Original Post)
xchrom
Jun 2014
OP
Erich Bloodaxe BSN
(14,733 posts)1. Not at all surprising.
Red states tend to have laxer regulations which lead industries that want to be able to pollute to migrate to them. Indeed, red state governors usually consider this a 'selling point' for 'creating jobs', when all they're doing is relocating jobs and industries from other states, usually giving them tax breaks at the same time that negate most of the benefits of having said corporations in the state. I believe the term is 'smokestack chasing'.