[Pages S5823-S5824]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]



                              S.J. Res. 53

  Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, I come to the floor to talk about S.J. 
Res. 53. We will have a chance to vote on that tomorrow. I am joined by 
my colleague from Maryland, Senator Van Hollen, and my colleague on the 
Environment and Public Works Committee, Senator Whitehouse from Rhode 
Island. I also want to thank Senator Carper for his leadership as the 
senior Democrat on the Environment and Public Works Committee in regard 
to this resolution.
  This resolution will be voted on tomorrow. It deals with the CRA--
Congressional Review Act--vote in regard to the Trump administration's 
affordable clean energy rule. That is probably a misnomer. It is what I 
call the dirty powerplant rule. The CRA would repeal that so that we 
can go back to the Clean Power Plan that was promulgated under the 
Obama administration in 2015.
  Let me explain what the Trump-era rule would do. First, it would 
repeal the Clean Power Plan that was issued in 2015. That plan had real 
results in it. It set limits on a powerplant's production of dangerous 
carbon. It made meaningful progress. The rule promulgated by President 
Trump's administration would repeal that and substitute it with a plan 
that would be a powerplant judgment in each powerplant--coal-burning 
only--and would not take into consideration the powerplant mix of 
individual States.
  The previous rule allowed the States to figure out how to reach those 
goals. So a State could do a mix. They could start using natural gas. 
They could start using renewable energy. They could meet their goals 
that are set with a reduction of about one-third of these dangerous 
carbon emissions but with local discretion on how to reach those goals.
  The rule that was promulgated that I am seeking to reverse allows 
only efficiency per coal powerplants, does not allow the mixing of the 
different technologies, and prohibits the States from pursuing market-
based plans.
  I am going to tell you, in my region of the country, we have what is 
known as REGI, which is a compact to reduce carbon emissions. We do it 
by energizing market forces so that we can get to friendlier sources of 
energy, which, by the way, has helped our region not only reduce carbon 
emissions but create green energy jobs, which is in our interest.
  Let me point out from the beginning that the powerplants are the 
largest stationary source of harmful carbon emissions. Why should 
everybody be concerned about it? We know its impact on climate change. 
We have seen the harmful impacts of climate change in America, from the 
wildfires out West to the flooding here in the East. We have seen the 
problems not only in our own community but throughout the world. In my 
own State of Maryland, we have had two 100-year floods within 20 months 
in Ellicott City, MD. The list goes on and on about the impact of 
climate change. We see the coastal line changing in our lifetime. We 
are seeing regular flooding. We are seeing habitable land become 
inhabitable. All of that is affected by our carbon emissions, and the 
Obama-era Clean Power Plan did something about it. The rule that we 
will have a chance to vote on tomorrow would do nothing about it.
  We see this as a public health risk. I can't tell you how frequently 
I have heard from my constituents who have someone in their family who 
has a respiratory illness: What can we do for cleaner air? Children are 
staying home from school because of bad air days. Parents are missing 
time from work. Premature deaths. All that is impacted by clean air.
  I talk frequently about the Chesapeake Bay. I am honored to represent 
the Chesapeake Bay region in the U.S. Senate, along with Senator Van 
Hollen, and we treasure the work that has been done. It has been an 
international model of all the stakeholders coming together in order to 
clean up the Chesapeake Bay, and we are making tremendous progress on 
dealing with the sorts of pollution coming from runoff or from farming 
activities or development. But, quite frankly, we have not been 
successful in dealing with airborne pollutants that are going into the 
Chesapeake Bay.
  In Maryland, we are a downwind State. We need a national effort here. 
Maryland could be doing everything right, but if the surrounding States 
are not, we suffer the consequences. That is why the Clean Power Plan 
was so attractive in dealing with this issue, because it dealt with it 
with national goals. Establish how to attain them by the local 
governments. That is the way it should be.
  Let me give the numbers. The Clean Power Plan that is repealed by the 
rule under the Trump administration would have reduced dangerous carbon 
emission by about one-third. We believe the rule that was promulgated 
by the Trump administration could actually increase dangerous 
emissions.
  Let me use EPA's regulatory impact analysis. Looking at 
CO<inf>2</inf>--carbon dioxide--the Agency says that the Trump rule 
will reduce it by 0.7 percent. That is less than 1 percent. The Clean 
Power Plan issued by President Obama--19 percent. SO<inf>2</inf>s under 
Trump are 5.7 percent; under the Obama rule, 24 percent. NO<inf>X</inf> 
emissions under the plan that was promulgated under the Trump 
administration are 0.9 percent--less than 1 percent. Under the Clean 
Power Plan, it is 22 percent.
  We really are talking about whether we are serious about dealing with 
dangerous carbon emissions or whether we are going to at best maintain 
the status quo; at worst, make things even worse.
  It saddens me that my colleagues on the other side of the aisle are 
embracing the ACE rule, since it threatens to reverse much of the 
progress we have made in reducing air pollution--progress their 
conservationist Republican predecessors helped to spur. The Clean Air 
Act amendments, which established the sulfur dioxide--SO<inf>2</inf>--
cap-and-trade program, were adopted in 1990. This was never a partisan 
issue; cap-and-trade was originally a Republican idea. George Herbert 
Walker Bush was President. It passed the House of Representatives by a 
401-to-21 vote. It passed this body, the U.S. Senate, by an 89-to-11 
vote. It has been highly successful. During George W. Bush's 
Presidency, the EPA determined that the SO<inf>2</inf> cap-and-trade 
program had a 40-1 benefit-to-cost ratio.
  The Supreme Court held in Massachusetts v. EPA that the EPA has a 
responsibility to regulate these carbon emissions. So that is exactly 
what was done in 2015, which is now being jeopardized because of the 
regulation that was issued under the Trump administration.
  I had a chance to serve in the State legislature. This is an affront 
to federalism. Innovation for green energy and jobs is prohibited under 
the rule that I am seeking to repeal. It is prohibited. That is why 22 
States and 7 local governments have filed suit against this regulation. 
But we can act.
  The Congressional Review Act allows us to take action in this body, 
and that is why I filed that so we can take action. If we allow this 
rule to go forward, it will delay the implementation of carbon emission 
reductions--delay it. If we vote for the CRA, we will be back on track.

[[Page S5824]]

  We have already seen the U.S. leadership challenged in this area with 
President Trump's decision to withdraw from the Paris accord--the only 
nation in the world that has done so. Who has filled that void? Quite 
frankly, it has been China.
  Do we want to cede our leadership globally to a country with a 
controlled government economy like China or do we want to reassert U.S. 
leadership? We are going to have a chance to do that tomorrow with a 
vote in the U.S. Senate. I urge my colleagues to support the 
Congressional Review Act resolution I have filed, S.J. Res. 53.
  With that, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
  Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. President, I would like to start by thanking my 
friend and colleague from the State of Maryland, Senator Cardin, for 
bringing this resolution to the floor of the Senate--as he said, we 
will be voting on it tomorrow--but also for his longstanding support 
and efforts in trying to protect our environment, to protect the 
Chesapeake Bay, and to address the urgent issue of climate change, 
which anybody with eyes can see is already having a devastating impact 
on communities throughout our country and, indeed, throughout the 
world.
  I am also very pleased to be here with our colleague, the Senator 
from Rhode Island, Mr. Whitehouse, who has made this such an important 
cause and has kept the Senate focused on this pressing issue.
  As Senator Cardin indicated, under the previous administration, under 
the leadership of President Obama, as a country we adopted something 
known as the Clean Power Plan rule. This was a historic step forward. 
It was a blueprint to create more good-paying jobs in the clean energy 
sector. In fact, we have seen a tremendous growth of those jobs in the 
area of solar and wind power and other jobs.
  That Clean Power Plan rule, under the Obama administration, also 
really addressed the issue of carbon pollution in the atmosphere, 
beginning to reduce it significantly, to offset the damage and real 
costs we are already experiencing in communities from that climate 
change.
  As Senator Cardin said, this is an area where there are huge 
communities, if our country moves forward, in the area of clean energy 
jobs. Right now, with this new Trump administration action, we are 
ceding the playing field to China, which is happily seizing the 
initiative and moving forward and creating more and more jobs in the 
clean energy sector. If we don't wake up, we are going to lose that 
important global competition in the vital sector to China, which has 
established a goal of dominating the area of clean energy technologies 
by 2025.
  Instead of building on the progress of the Obama administration, on 
June 19, the Trump administration decided to repeal and roll back these 
important rules that have been put in place and substitute them with 
something that, in the worst case, actually makes the situation much 
worse than even before these Trump rules and, at the very least, is a 
huge retreat from the progress we were headed toward under the rules of 
the previous administration.
  Let me just point out the analysis that was done by a very good 
organization called Resources for the Future. They looked at their 
analysis of this Trump proposal, which I agree with Senator Cardin is 
better termed the ``Trump dirty power plan,'' and they concluded it 
would do very little, if anything, to address climate change and would 
have an adverse air quality impact in many of our States.
  Some people may recall when the Trump version of this power plan, the 
``dirty power plan,'' was released last year, people looked at the 
EPA's own analysis of that rule, and it showed that 1,630 of our fellow 
Americans would die prematurely under the Trump provisions compared to 
the Obama-era provisions.
  So when the Trump administration released this most recent version of 
their amended plan back in June, they made it really difficult to put 
together all the data so people would not be able to connect the dots 
in many of these areas, but Senator Cardin has presented some of the 
results of this. I want to emphasize those and put them in somewhat 
different terms, which is, what does the Trump rule accomplish compared 
to the Obama rule on some of these issues?
  So with respect to carbon dioxide emissions, the Trump rule would 
reduce carbon dioxide emissions, carbon pollution emissions, by 2.7 
percent of what the Obama administration would have done--2.7 percent 
of what the rule they are replacing would have done.
  With respect to sulfur dioxide, the Trump plan reduces sulfur dioxide 
emissions by only 1.9 percent of what the Obama administration's rule 
would have done.
  When it comes to nitrous oxide, the Trump proposal, the Trump plan, 
reduces nitrous oxide by only 2.5 percent compared to what the Obama 
provisions would have done.
  If you take all of these together, you can see it is a really anemic 
proposal that takes us way backward compared to where we were. That is 
why I support Senator Cardin's efforts on the floor, with the vote 
tomorrow, to say no, to say no to the Trump administration's efforts to 
roll back the progress on clean air, to roll back the progress on clean 
water because a lot of that pollution settles in places like the 
Chesapeake Bay, and to roll back progress on climate change, which we 
know is hitting our communities as we speak.
  I want to give some additional Maryland examples here. The Baltimore 
Sun ran a story a little while back about the staggering costs that 
Maryland and Marylanders would have to pay to build seawalls to protect 
communities from sea level rise. A study from the Institute for 
Governance & Sustainable Development found that in the coming decades, 
seawalls to protect thousands of homes, businesses, and farmlands from 
Ocean City to Baltimore City will cost more than $27 billion--$27 
billion.
  We have also seen dramatic flooding in the city of Annapolis that is 
already hurting the Naval Academy. This past week, we just had a famous 
national boat show, and in the middle of this boat show, there was huge 
flooding in the city of Annapolis. The costs to the city and that 
community are rising rapidly and have been well-documented.
  I ask my colleagues to support Senator Cardin's motion. Let's not go 
backward. Let's not go backward in terms of protecting our air. Let's 
not go backward in terms of the battle against climate change because 
going backward means less good jobs in America, it means more dirty air 
and more asthma, and it means ceding this important area to China and 
others in the global economy.
  I urge my colleagues to support the motion of Senator Cardin.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Blackburn). The Senator from Rhode 
Island.