Current:Home > ScamsPennsylvania court permanently blocks effort to make power plants pay for greenhouse gas emissions-LoTradeCoin
Pennsylvania court permanently blocks effort to make power plants pay for greenhouse gas emissions
View Date:2024-12-24 03:18:30
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Pennsylvania cannot enforce a regulation to make power plant owners pay for their planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions, a state court ruled Wednesday, dealing another setback to the centerpiece of former Gov. Tom Wolf’s plan to fight global warming.
The Commonwealth Court last year temporarily blocked Pennsylvania from becoming the first major fossil fuel-producing state to adopt a carbon-pricing program, and the new ruling makes that decision permanent.
The ruling is a victory for Republican lawmakers and coal-related interests that argued that the carbon-pricing plan amounted to a tax, and therefore would have required legislative approval. They also argued that Wolf, a Democrat, had sought to get around legislative opposition by unconstitutionally imposing the requirement through a regulation.
The court agreed in a 4-1 decision.
It would be up to Wolf’s successor, Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro, to decide whether to appeal the decision to the state Supreme Court. Shapiro’s administration had no immediate comment on the ruling, and Shapiro hasn’t said publicly if he would follow through on it.
Republican lawmakers hailed the decision and urged Shapiro not to appeal it. Critics had said the pricing plan would raise electricity bills, hurt in-state energy producers and drive new power generation to other states while doing little to fight climate change.
Opponents also included natural gas-related interests in the nation’s No. 2 gas state, industrial and commercial power users and labor unions whose members work on pipelines and at power plants and refineries.
The regulation written by Wolf’s administration had authorized Pennsylvania to join the multistate Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, which imposes a price and declining cap on carbon dioxide emissions from power plants.
Backers of the plan had called it the biggest step ever taken in Pennsylvania to fight climate change and said it would have generated hundreds of millions of dollars a year to promote climate-friendly energy sources and cut electricity bills through energy conservation programs.
The plan’s supporters included environmental advocates as well as solar, wind and nuclear power producers.
___
Follow Marc Levy: http://twitter.com/timelywriter
veryGood! (2884)
Related
- College Football Playoff snubs: Georgia among teams with beef after second rankings
- Carbon capture technology: The future of clean energy or a costly and misguided distraction?
- Parkland shooting sheriff's deputy Scot Peterson found not guilty on all counts
- The Real Reason Kellyanne Conway's 18-Year-Old Daughter Claudia Joined Playboy
- The Daily Money: Markets react to Election 2024
- Cuba Gooding Jr. Settles Civil Sexual Abuse Case
- Where Jill Duggar Stands With Her Controversial Family Today
- Vanderpump Rules' Lala Kent’s Affordable Amazon Haul is So Chic You’d Never “Send it to Darrell
- Garth Brooks wants to move his sexual assault case to federal court. How that could help the singer.
- Overdose deaths from fentanyl combined with xylazine surge in some states, CDC reports
Ranking
- New wildfires burn in US Northeast while bigger blazes rage out West
- Anxiety Mounts Abroad About Climate Leadership and the Volatile U.S. Election
- North Carolina Wind Power Hangs in the Balance Amid National Security Debate
- Chuck Todd Is Leaving NBC's Meet the Press and Kristen Welker Will Become the New Host
- South Carolina lab recaptures 5 more escaped monkeys but 13 are still loose
- Princess Eugenie Gives Birth, Welcomes Baby No. 2 With Husband Jack Brooksbank
- Huge Western Fires in 1910 Changed US Wildfire Policy. Will Today’s Conflagrations Do the Same?
- At Flint Debate, Clinton and Sanders Avoid Talk of Environmental Racism
Recommendation
-
Everard Burke Introduce
-
Targeted Ecosystem Restoration Can Protect Climate, Biodiversity
-
This week on Sunday Morning (July 2)
-
Women face age bias at work no matter how old they are: No right age
-
Tampa Bay Rays' Wander Franco arrested again in Dominican Republic, according to reports
-
Read full text of the Supreme Court decision on web designer declining to make LGBTQ wedding websites
-
Adding Batteries to Existing Rooftop Solar Could Qualify for 30 Percent Tax Credit
-
Geothermal: Tax Breaks and the Google Startup Bringing Earth’s Heat into Homes