President's Clear Skies Initiative Won't Clean Pollution Without Changes
(28 January 2003 — Washington) Responding to reports that President Bush will call for support of the “Clear Skies Initiative” (CSI) in his State of the Union Address, Environmental Defense today called on Congress to substantially strengthen environmental and public health protections needed to deal with pollution from power plants.
“The President is giving Congress an opportunity to deal with a key environmental and public health challenge - but only if the legislation it enacts is significantly stronger than the President’s proposal. The Environmental Protection Agency’s own air quality modeling and economic analyses show that deeper pollution reductions than called for under CSI are cost-effective and absolutely necessary to protect public health and the environment,” said Joseph Goffman, Environmental Defense senior attorney. “CSI calls for reductions in sulfur dioxide (SO2), oxides of nitrogen (NOx) and mercury, but none in carbon dioxide pollution.”
Reflecting the critical impact power plant pollution has on air quality, the CSI (proposed in 2001) cuts pollution from power plants, but not at levels sufficient to protect public health and without cuts in carbon dioxide emissions, the major source of heat trapping greenhouse gases. Early indications are that the President will be offering up CSI without any of the needed improvements.
“While CSI uses economic incentives to lower the cost of compliance, it falls woefully short of meeting the public health and environmental goals of the Clean Air Act, and fails utterly to deal with the threat of climate change,” Goffman said.
“If Congress wants to respond seriously to the President’s challenge - and to the demands of environmental and public health protection - it should look to the kind of legislation introduced last year by Senators Jeffords and Lieberman and by Senators Chafee, Carper, Baucus and Breaux. Those bipartisan bills required reductions in carbon dioxide and targeted cuts in sulfur dioxide, oxides of nitrogen and mercury at levels needed to protect public health and the environment,” said Goffman.
With more than 3 million members, Environmental Defense Fund creates transformational solutions to the most serious environmental problems. To do so, EDF links science, economics, law, and innovative private-sector partnerships to turn solutions into action. edf.org
Latest press releases
-
Arizona Governor Announces New Groundwater Active Management Area to Protect Community
January 12, 2026 -
Court Rules Trump DOE Violated the Constitution When It Cancelled Clean Energy Funding in Specific States
January 12, 2026 -
Gov. Newsom’s Can-Do Budget Proposal for Zero-Emission Vehicles Will Reduce Costs and Deliver Enormous Benefits for Californians
January 9, 2026 -
Trump EPA Takes Final Steps on Rule Expected to Overturn Endangerment Finding, Clean Vehicle Standards
January 9, 2026 -
California Shows Climate Policy is an Affordability Solution, Needed Now More than Ever
January 8, 2026 -
House Passes Funding Bills with Important Guardrails on President Trump
January 8, 2026