Court Ruling on HFCs Deals Another Blow to Paris Climate Goals

A U.S. court ruled the EPA lacked authority to regulate the powerful greenhouse gases, used for cooling and refrigeration. Industry had supported the regulations.

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HFCs are greenhouse gases used in refrigeration. Credit: Alex Livesey/Getty Images
Hydrofluorocarbons, or HFCs, are potent greenhouse gases that have been used as coolants. Less damaging alternatives are available today. Credit: Alex Livesey/Getty Images

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The federal appeals court’s ruling this week striking down an Obama-era rule on air conditioning and refrigeration gases deals another significant blow to hopes of the U.S. reaching its target under the Paris climate accord.

The 2015 rule would have restricted the manufacturing of products containing hydrofluorocarbons, or HFCs. It was an important building block of the U.S. climate commitment, because HFCs, a short-lived climate pollutant, are hundreds to thousands of times more potent than carbon dioxide at trapping heat in the atmosphere, though they have a shorter life span.

The rule had the potential to slash U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by as much as the equivalent of 72 million metric tons of carbon dioxide by 2025,  according to an analysis by scientists at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. That’s equal to the pollution of 21 coal-fired power plants, or about 4 percent of the cuts that the United States needed to meet its goal under the Paris climate agreement.

And the U.S. had committed to go even further in reducing HFCs. At a meeting in Kigali, Rwanda, last October, the U.S. was one of nearly 200 countries that agreed to update the Montreal Protocol to phase out HFCs. The Berkeley lab scientists calculated even larger emissions reductions from the steps that were agreed to at Kigali—as much as 88 million metric tons by 2025 in the U.S.

Together with the rule struck down by the court, the U.S. commitment at Kigali would have fulfilled 9 percent of the U.S. pledge under the Paris accord.

It is not clear how the court ruling will affect U.S. efforts to implement the Kigali amendment, but it shows that at least some judges think the Environmental Protection Agency needs more specific authority from Congress to act on HFCs.

That could be a problem in the current Congress. The Trump administration has given no indication of whether it intends to bring the Kigali amendment before the Senate for ratification. (Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., has indicated he would oppose ratification. He says he sees it as an effort to shoehorn climate change policy into a treaty that was meant to address ozone depletion.)

U.S. Industry Leaders Supported the Rule

The rule to phase out HFCs was a climate change policy from former President Barack Obama‘s administration that many believed would survive the Trump era. Donald Trump‘s administration defended the rule in court, with the backing of two large U.S.-based chemical manufacturers that have invested heavily in alternatives that are less damaging to the atmosphere—DuPont spinoff Chemours and Honeywell International.

But in its ruling this week, a panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit found 2-1 in favor of two foreign HFC manufacturers—Mexichem Fluor of Mexico and France-based Arkema—holding that the EPA had no authority to regulate the gases under the Clean Air Act.

HFCs came into use as a replacement for an earlier generation of refrigeration gases, chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, that depleted the ozone layer of the atmosphere and were phased out under another international agreement, the 1987 Montreal Protocol. The EPA had sought to curb HFCs under a section of the law that implemented the protocol and phased out CFCs; the agency took HFCs off the list of safe alternatives due to their properties as greenhouse gases.

But because HFCs are not ozone-depleting gases, the court said the EPA cannot use that section of the law to phase them out.

“EPA’s authority to regulate ozone-depleting substances … does not give EPA authority to order the replacement of substances that are not ozone depleting but that contribute to climate change,” wrote Judge Brett Kavanaugh, an appointee of President George W. Bush. “Congress has not yet enacted general climate change legislation.”

“Although we understand and respect EPA’s overarching effort to fill that legislative void and regulate HFCs… Here, EPA has tried to jam a square peg (regulating non-ozone depleting substances that may contribute to climate change) into a round hole (the existing statutory landscape),” he wrote. Kavanaugh was joined by Judge Janice Rogers Brown, a Bush appointee, in the majority. Judge Robert Wilkins, an Obama appointee, dissented, saying that the EPA was due deference for what he said was a reasonable interpretation of the statute.

‘We Cannot Go Backward’

Policymakers around the world have focused on how to reduce HFCs, which have become the fastest-growing source of climate emissions as air conditioning and cooling have increased. They have the potential to cause up to half a degree Celsius of warming by 2100.

David Doniger, director of the climate and clean air program at the Natural Resources Defense Council, which intervened on the side of EPA, said the environmental group was exploring all options for appeals.

“The fact is, safer, climate-friendlier alternatives are readily available and should be used more to help cool our overheating world,” he said in a statement. “It’s also true that the U.S. has been a leader in advancing HFC alternative technologies. … We cannot go backward, or the climate damage suffered by the American people will only magnify.”

An EPA spokesperson said the agency is reviewing the ruling.

Separate Ruling Further Delays Clean Power Plan

The D.C. Circuit Court delivered a separate blow to the Obama climate legacy on Tuesday when it decided to extend its stay of litigation over the Clean Power Plan while the Trump administration works to repeal the rule. Environmental groups, health groups, and states have pressed the court not to wait, but to allow the case, which was argued before Trump took office, to proceed to a ruling on EPA’s authority.

For now, the Circuit Court was unwilling to take that step, although two of the judges, Clinton-appointee David Tatel, and Obama-appointee Patricia Millett, in a concurrence, remarked that extending the 60-day stay in litigation, at the same time that the Supreme Court has stayed the rule itself, “has the effect of relieving EPA of its obligation to comply with that statutory duty for the indefinite future.” But the judges said any challenge of the Supreme Court’s stay would have to be decided by the Supreme Court. The high court is in recess until October.

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