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Obama administration about to declare carbon dioxide a danger to the public, allowing regulation
Jeremy Hance
mongabay.com
December 06, 2009



The day before talks start in Copenhagen on a new international treaty to combat climate change, the Wall Street Journal reports that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in the United States is set to declare carbon dioxide a 'public danger' as soon as Monday.

The decision by the EPA means that carbon dioxide emissions could become regulated by the US government, including setting new emission standards for vehicles and possibly regulating other high-carbon industries such as utility companies.

The timing of announcement is thought in part to give even more political clout to the Obama Administration at the Copenhagen talks. The move may also propel the Senate to act more quickly on climate legislation before them.

After long waiting for Congress to tackle climate policy, the Obama Administration recently shot into action in time to counter rising criticism of the United States' inaction before the Copenhagen Summit. Over the past few weeks the administration has set an emissions reduction target, negotiated with China and India on the issue, and announced that Obama will attend the end of the Copenhagen talks along with other world leaders.

It appears that the Obama Administration has become intent on proving that it is serious about fighting climate change.







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(11/17/2009) 8.7 billion tons of carbon dioxide was emitted into the earth's atmosphere in 2008, a growth of 2 percent despite the economic crisis. This averages out to each person contributing a record high of 1.3 tons of carbon, according to a report in the journal Nature Science. While the global recession slowed the growth of fossil fuel emissions for the first time this decade, it did not lower emissions altogether.


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CITATION:
Jeremy Hance
mongabay.com (December 06, 2009). Obama administration about to declare carbon dioxide a danger to the public, allowing regulation . http://news.mongabay.com/2009/1206-hance_epa.html


Tags:
united states carbon dioxide governance politics jeremy hance green environment carbon emissions greenhouse gas emissions environmental politics Environmental Law obama administration and the environment automobiles bold and dangerous ideas that may save the world climate change climate change politics global warming mitigation greenhouse gases happy-upbeat environmental pollution sustainability

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