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My Amazing Hands
James E. McCarthy
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R946
R783
Discovery Miles 7 830
Save R163 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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My Amazing Hands
James E. McCarthy
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R588
R499
Discovery Miles 4 990
Save R89 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Rapid growth in the use of computers and the incorporation of
electronic features in a wide array of consumer products have been
among the most important driving forces of the nation's economy
during the last decade; but they also pose major potential
environmental problems. In addition to producing better products,
the improvements in technology have created growing volumes of
obsolete products to be managed as waste. According to the National
Safety Council, which undertook the first major effort to gather
quantitative information on electronic product recycling, 55.4
million personal computers will become obsolete in the United
States in 2002. At an average weight of 70 pounds, obsolete PCs
weighing 3.878 billion pounds will be added to the supply of waste
needing management in 2002 alone.
This report summarizes the Clean Air Act and its major regulatory
requirements. It excerpts, with minor modifications, the Clean Air
Act chapter of CRS Report RL30798, which summarizes a dozen
environmental statutes that form the basis for the programs of the
Environmental Protection Agency.
Air quality has improved substantially in the United States in the
40 years of EPA's Clean Air Act regulation, but more needs to be
done, according to the agency's science advisers, to protect public
health and the environment from the effects of air pollution. Thus,
the agency continues to promulgate regulations addressing air
pollution using authority given it by Congress more than 20 years
ago. In the 112th Congress, Members from both parties have raised
questions about the cost effectiveness of some of these regulations
and/or whether the agency has exceeded its regulatory authority in
promulgating them. Others in Congress have supported EPA, noting
that the Clean Air Act, often affirmed in court decisions, has
authorized or required the agency's actions. EPA's regulatory
actions on greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions have been one focus of
congressional interest. Although the Obama Administration has
consistently said that it would prefer that Congress pass new
legislation to address climate change, such legislation now seems
unlikely. Instead, over the last three years, EPA has developed GHG
regulations using its existing Clean Air Act authority. EPA
finalized GHG emission standards for cars and light trucks on April
1, 2010, and on August 28, 2012, and for larger trucks on August 9,
2011. The implementation of these standards, in turn, triggered
permitting and Best Available Control Technology requirements for
new major stationary sources of GHGs. It is the triggering of
standards for stationary sources (power plants, manufacturing
facilities, etc.) that has raised the most concern in Congress:
legislation has been considered in both the House and Senate aimed
at preventing EPA from implementing these requirements. In the
first session of this Congress, the House passed H.R. 1, which
contained provisions prohibiting the use of appropriated funds to
implement various EPA GHG regulatory activities, and H.R. 910, a
bill that would repeal EPA's endangerment finding, redefine "air
pollutants" to exclude greenhouse gases, and prohibit EPA from
promulgating any regulation to address climate change. In the
Senate, H.R. 1 was defeated, and an amendment identical to H.R. 910
(S.Amdt. 183) failed on a vote of 50-50. EPA has taken action on a
number of other air pollutant regulations, generally in response to
court actions remanding previous rules. Remanded rules have
included the Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR) and the Clean Air
Mercury Rule-rules designed to control the long-range transport of
sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and mercury from power plants
through cap-and-trade programs. Other remanded rules included
hazardous air pollutant ("MACT") standards for boilers and cement
kilns. EPA is addressing the court remands through new regulations,
that have now been promulgated. Many in Congress view the new
regulations as overly stringent. The House has passed three bills
(H.R. 2250, H.R. 2401, and H.R. 2681) to delay or revoke the new
standards and change the statutory requirements for their
replacements. In addition to the power plant and MACT rules, EPA is
also reviewing ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) for ozone,
particulates, and other widespread air pollutants. These standards
serve as EPA's definition of clean air, and drive a range of
regulatory controls. The revised NAAQS also face opposition in
Congress. As passed by the House, H.R. 2401 would amend the Clean
Air Act to require EPA to consider feasibility and cost in setting
NAAQS, and H.R. 1633 would prevent EPA from setting standards for
ambient concentrations of rural dust.
Since Barack Obama was sworn in as President in 2009, the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has proposed and promulgated
numerous regulations implementing the pollution control statutes
enacted by Congress. Critics have reacted strongly. Many, both
within Congress and outside of it, have accused the agency of
reaching beyond the authority given it by Congress and ignoring or
underestimating the costs and economic impacts of proposed and
promulgated rules. The House has conducted vigorous oversight of
the agency in the 112th Congress, and has approved several bills
that would overturn specific regulations or limit the agency's
authority. Particular attention is being paid to the Clean Air Act,
under which EPA has moved forward with the first federal controls
on emissions of greenhouse gases and also addressed emissions of
conventional pollutants from a number of industries. Environmental
groups disagree that the agency has overreached, and EPA states
that critics' focus on the cost of controls obscures the benefits
of new regulations, which, it estimates, far exceed the costs; and
it maintains that pollution control is an important source of
economic activity, exports, and American jobs. Further, the agency
and its supporters say that EPA is carrying out the mandates
detailed by Congress in the federal environmental statutes. This
report provides background information on recent EPA regulatory
activity to help address these issues. It examines 40 major or
controversial regulatory actions taken by or under development at
EPA since January 2009, providing details on the regulatory action
itself, presenting an estimated timeline for completion of the rule
(including identification of related court or statutory deadlines),
and, in general, providing EPA's estimates of costs and benefits,
where available. The report includes tables that show which rules
have been finalized and which remain under development. The report
also discusses factors that affect the timeframe in which
regulations take effect, including statutory and judicial
deadlines, public comment periods, judicial review, and permitting
procedures, the net results of which are that existing facilities
are likely to have several years before being required to comply
with most of the regulatory actions under discussion. Unable to
account for such factors, which will vary from case to case,
timelines that show dates for proposal and promulgation of EPA
standards effectively underestimate the complexities of the
regulatory process and overstate the near-term impact of many of
the regulatory actions.
Attention to environmental issues in the 110th Congress focused
early andheavily on climate change - the state of the science, and
whether (and, if so, how)to address greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
Seventeen bills had been introducedto establish GHG emission caps
as of June 2008, and hearings on climate changewere held by at
least 10 committees. The Lieberman-Warner bill to establish a
cap-and-trade system for GHG emissions (S. 2191) was reported by
the SenateEnvironment and Public Works Committee, May 20, 2008.
Senate debate began ona modified version of the bill (S. 3036) June
2 but ended June 6, as the Senate failedto muster sufficient votes
to invoke cloture.
This report provides information regarding pollution from ships and
port facilities; discusses some of the measures being implemented
and considered by local, state, and federal regulatory agencies;
discusses the efforts to strengthen Annex VI of the International
Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL); and
describes legislation in Congress to control emissions from ships,
as well as efforts in Congress to address the applicability of
proposed EPA regulations to ships on the Great Lakes.
Several major statutes form the legal basis for the programs of the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Many of these have been
amended several times. The current provisions of each are briefly
summarised in this report. The Pollution Prevention Act (PPA) seeks
to prevent pollution through reduced generation of pollutants at
their point of origin. The Clean Air Act (CAA) requires EPA to set
mobile source limits, ambient air quality standards, hazardous air
pollutant emission standards, standards for new pollution sources,
and significant deterioration requirements; and to focus on areas
that do not attain standards. The Clean Water Act (CWA) establishes
a sewage treatment construction grants program, and a regulatory
and enforcement program for discharges of wastes into U.S. waters.
Focusing on the regulation of the intentional disposal of materials
into ocean waters and authorising related research is the Ocean
Dumping Act. The Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) establishes primary
drinking water standards, regulates underground injection disposal
practices, and establishes a groundwater control program. The Solid
Waste Disposal Act and Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
(RCRA) provide regulation of solid and hazardous waste, while the
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability
Act (CERCLA), or Superfund, provides authority for the federal
government to respond to releases of hazardous substances, and
established a fee-maintained fund to clean up abandoned hazardous
waste sites. The authority to collect fees has expired, and funding
is now provided from general revenues. The Emergency Planning and
Community Right-to-Know Act requires industrial reporting of toxic
releases and encourages planning to respond to chemical
emergencies. The Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) regulates the
testing of chemicals and their use, and the Federal Insecticide,
Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) governs pesticide products
and their use.
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