By Alan Caruba
Putting aside its insane attack on
carbon dioxide, declaring the most essential gas on Earth, other than oxygen, a
“pollutant”, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is currently engaged in
trying to further regulate ozone for no apparent reason other than its incessant
attack on the economy.
In late January on behalf of the
Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT),
Dr. Bonner R. Cohen, Ph.D, filed his testimony on the proposed national ambient
air quality standard for ozone. The EPA wants to lower the current ozone
standard of 75 parts per billion (ppb) to a range of 70 to 65 ppb, and even as
low as 60 ppb.
“After promulgation of the current
ozone standards in 2008,” Dr. Cohen noted, “EPA two years later called a
temporary halt to the nationwide implementation of the standard in response to
the severe recession prevailing at the time.”
In other words, it was deemed bad for
the economy. “Now, EPA is proposing a new, more stringent standard even before
the current standard has been fully implemented and even though, according to
the EPA’s own data, ozone concentrations have declined by 33 percent since
1980.”
According to Wikipedia: “Ozone is a
powerful oxidant (far more so than dioxygen) and has many industrial and
consumer applications related to oxidation. This same high oxidizing potential,
however, causes ozone to damage mucous and respiratory tissues in animals, and
also tissues in plants, above concentrations of about 100 ppb. This makes ozone a potent respiratory hazard and
pollutant near ground level. However, the so-called ozone layer (a portion of
the stratosphere with a higher concentration of ozone, from two to eight ppm) is
beneficial, preventing damaging ultraviolet light from reaching the Earth’s
surface, to the benefit of both plants and
animals.”
So, yes, reducing ozone in the
ground level atmosphere does have health benefits, but the EPA doesn't
just enforce the Clean Air Act, it also seeks to reinterpret and use it in every
way possible to harm the economy.
As Dr. Cohen pointed out, “the
Clean Air Act requires EPA’s Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee to produce
an evaluation of the adverse effects, including economic impact, of obtaining
and maintaining a tighter standard. Despite repeated requests from Congress,
(the Committee) has not produced the legally required evaluation. By ignoring
this statutory mandate, and moving ahead with its ozone rulemaking, EPA is
showing contempt for the rule of law and for the taxpayers who provide the
agency’s funding.”
Since President Obama took
office in 2009 he has used the EPA as one of his primary tools to harm the U.S.
economy. In a Feb 2 Daily Caller article, Michael
Bastasch
reported that “Tens of thousands of coal mine and power plant workers have lost
their jobs under President Obama, and more layoffs could be on the way as the
administration continues to pile on tens of billions of dollars in regulatory
costs.”
The American Coal Council’s
CEO Betsy Monseu also testified regarding the proposed ozone standards, noting
that the increased reductions would affect power plants, industrial plants,
auto, agriculture, commercial and residential buildings, and more.
Citing a study undertaken for
the National Association of Manufacturers, “a 60 ppb ozone standard would result
in a GDP reduction of $270 billion per year, a loss of up to 2.9 million jobs
equivalents annually, and a reduction of $1,570 in average annual household
consumption. Electricity costs could increase up to 23% and natural gas cost by
up to 52% over the period to 2040.”
In a rational society,
imposing such job losses and increased costs when the problem is already being
solved would make no sense, but we all live in Obama’s society these days and
that means increasing ozone standards only make sense if you want to harm the
economy in every way possible.
© Alan
Caruba, 2015
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