The coal plant in Shamokin Dam, Pa., is a local landmark that delivered electricity to this region for more than six decades. It closed in 2014. Next to it, a brand new natural gas power plant is under construction. The Sunbury Pipeline will feed Marcellus Shale gas into that plant.
Jeff Brady / NPR
Pennsylvania high court to consider plan to make power plants pay for greenhouse gas emissions
Covering Pennsylvania politics, government & scandals for @AP. The wicked flee when none pursueth. @Colorado native. As honest as a Denver man can be.
Jeff Brady / NPR
The coal plant in Shamokin Dam, Pa., is a local landmark that delivered electricity to this region for more than six decades. It closed in 2014. Next to it, a brand new natural gas power plant is under construction. The Sunbury Pipeline will feed Marcellus Shale gas into that plant.
Updated: May 24, 2023 | 5:27 pm
Justices on Pennsylvaniaâs Supreme Court indicated Wednesday that they are likely to have split opinions on whether a governor has the right to force power plant owners to pay for their planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions, or whether he first needs approval from a Legislature that refuses to go along with the plan.
On Wednesday, the stateâs highest court listened to arguments on whether a lower court was right last summer to halt Pennsylvania’s participation in a multistate consortium that imposes a price and declining cap on carbon dioxide emissions from power plants.
But the justices repeatedly turned the conversation to the underlying legal question still being considered by the lower court: whether former Gov. Tom Wolf usurped the Legislatureâs constitutional authority to approve any form of taxation.
In that dispute, Republican lawmakers contend the carbon-trading plan is an unconstitutional tax because it lacks legislative approval; state lawyers contend it is a fee that a state agency has the authority to impose to operate a program.
Justice Christine Donohue, a Democrat, suggested it might be difficult to rule on one issue without settling the other.
âI donât even know how we would make that holding without tipping our hand as to whether or not it’s a tax or a fee and we just donât play âhide the coinâ that way,” Donohue told a lawyer for Senate Republicans.
At stake is no small amount of money: Pennsylvania would have raised more than $1 billion had it begun participating in 2022 when Wolf intended, according to calculations by the Natural Resources Defense Council, a nonprofit environmental advocacy group.
Taking part in the consortium became the central plank in Wolfâs plan to fight global warming. It also is a political minefield for Gov. Josh Shapiro, Wolfâs successor and a fellow Democrat who was endorsed by labor unions that fought the plan.
The high court comprises four justices elected as Democrats, two as Republicans and one vacancy.
Justice Kevin Brobson, a Republican, signaled a number of objections to the plan.
At one point, he questioned whether the cost of the carbon-dioxide allowances that power plants would have to buy is too excessive to be considered a fee that pays for a regulatory process.
Then he suggested the plan is a âchicken and egg thingâ through which an agency imposes a fee before deciding how to spend it, an avenue that he said could be abused by agencies with an underfunded program.
âThen arenât we bypassing the General Assembly’s authority and the governor’s authority and weâre just basically allowing agencies to pump up their inadequate funds and just build these coffers?â Brobson asked a lawyer representing Shapiro’s administration.
The lawyer, Matthew White, said the money must be spent in accordance with the state’s air pollution laws and that the regulation envisions the money being used to enhance energy-efficiency programs, renewable energy usage and efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions.
White also said there is no evidence that the fees are adequate to address the problem of greenhouse gas pollution.
Democratic justices closely questioned assertions by a lawyer for Senate Republicans that the carbon-pricing plan cannot legally be a fee, partly because it works through regional auctions that impose costs and requirements on power plants in certain states, but not others.
âSo because it doesnât address everything, it shouldnât address anything in terms of regional impact?â Donohue asked.
Donohue also seemed to suggest that the aims of the carbon-pricing program could be protected by an environmental rights amendment to Pennsylvaniaâs constitution.
Shapiro has maintained that he does not support entering the consortium, the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, on Wolfâs terms.
But he continues to fight for it in court and his top environmental protection appointee told lawmakers in March that joining the consortium is âa vehicleâ that could help meet Shapiroâs âstrong and very aspirational goalsâ to help the environment.
Republican lawmakers, fossil fuel interests, industrial power users and trade unions oppose it, saying it will hurt the state’s energy industry and drive up electric bills.
State officials, independent researchers and environmental advocates say the money reaped through the auction of emission allowances would stabilize electricity bills, or lower them, while cutting greenhouse gas emissions and helping transition fossil fuel workers into new industries.
StateImpact Pennsylvania is a collaboration among WITF, WHYY, and the Allegheny Front. Reporters Reid Frazier, Rachel McDevitt and Susan Phillips cover the commonwealth’s energy economy. Read their reports on this site, and hear them on public radio stations across Pennsylvania.
Climate Solutions, a collaboration of news organizations, educational institutions and a theater company, uses engagement, education and storytelling to help central Pennsylvanians toward climate change literacy, resilience and adaptation. Our work will amplify how people are finding solutions to the challenges presented by a warming world.