Bill Text: TX SCR20 | 2011-2012 | 82nd Legislature | Comm Sub
Bill Title: Urging the United States Congress to prevent the Environmental Protection Agency from regulating greenhouse gases for stationary sources.
Sponsorship: Partisan Bill (Republican 2)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2011-04-05 - Not again placed on intent calendar [SCR20 Detail]
Download: Texas-2011-SCR20-Comm_Sub.html
| By: Fraser | S.C.R. No. 20 | |
| (In the Senate - Filed February 23, 2011; | ||
| February 28, 2011, read first time and referred to Committee on | ||
| Natural Resources; March 23, 2011, reported favorably by the | ||
| following vote: Yeas 7, Nays 0; March 23, 2011, sent to printer.) | ||
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| WHEREAS, The business climate in Texas has been consistently | ||
| ranked as the best in the United States, and the state's economy | ||
| regularly outpaces the rest of the nation; and | ||
| WHEREAS, Texas produces approximately 60 percent of all | ||
| chemicals manufactured in the United States, as well as 30 percent | ||
| of the nation's natural gas and 20 percent of its oil; in addition, | ||
| the state leads the nation in overall electricity production, and | ||
| its competitive wholesale power market is among the most robust and | ||
| demand-responsive in the country; and | ||
| WHEREAS, The manufacturing sector contributes $96 billion | ||
| annually to the Texas economy and employs more than one million | ||
| Texans at some of the highest salaries in the state; the continued | ||
| economic health of the state is dependent on this vital sector, and | ||
| Texas is competing globally to protect existing business investment | ||
| and attract new jobs; and | ||
| WHEREAS, Texas has not been immune to the global economic | ||
| recession; over the past two years, some manufacturers have shut | ||
| down and there have been significant job losses; yet in spite of | ||
| this challenging business climate, the Environmental Protection | ||
| Agency has moved forward with the regulation of greenhouse gas | ||
| emissions from stationary sources such as refineries, chemical | ||
| plants, power plants, and other commercial establishments; and | ||
| WHEREAS, The Environmental Protection Agency claims that | ||
| greenhouse gas emissions are air pollutants under Section 202(a) of | ||
| the Clean Air Act, but that act was designed to regulate | ||
| conventional pollutants, such as ozone and particulate matter, that | ||
| create local air quality problems, and not unconventional | ||
| pollutants, such as greenhouse gases, which are found in | ||
| essentially equal concentrations around the globe; in formulating | ||
| its plan to regulate greenhouse gases, the Environmental Protection | ||
| Agency failed to identify cost-effective technology to meet the | ||
| demands of such regulation and instead invoked the legal doctrine | ||
| of "absurd results," essentially admitting that implementing the | ||
| new rules would overwhelm the administrative capabilities of state | ||
| permitting authorities and the agency itself; and | ||
| WHEREAS, Congress and the scientific community continue to | ||
| engage in vigorous, legitimate, and substantive debate regarding | ||
| the regulation of greenhouse gases; meanwhile, the Environmental | ||
| Protection Agency has acted on its own to institute a backdoor | ||
| regulatory regime, an abuse of power with serious implications; | ||
| these regulations are projected to cost Texas more than 300,000 | ||
| jobs because of increased energy prices, compliance with required | ||
| greenhouse gas permit conditions, and greater competition from | ||
| overseas manufacturers that have lower energy costs; furthermore, | ||
| as it has communicated to the Environmental Protection Agency, the | ||
| State of Texas does not have the legal authority to regulate | ||
| greenhouse gas emissions from stationary sources in the manner | ||
| proposed by the Environmental Protection Agency; and | ||
| WHEREAS, The Environmental Protection Agency's regulation of | ||
| greenhouse gas emissions from stationary sources will prove highly | ||
| detrimental to the manufacturing and energy sectors in an already | ||
| struggling economy and will cause additional job losses that the | ||
| nation can ill afford; now, therefore, be it | ||
| RESOLVED, That the 82nd Legislature of the State of Texas | ||
| hereby respectfully urge the Congress of the United States to take | ||
| such actions as are necessary to prevent the Environmental | ||
| Protection Agency from regulating greenhouse gas emissions from | ||
| stationary sources; and, be it further | ||
| RESOLVED, That the Texas secretary of state forward official | ||
| copies of this resolution to the president of the United States, to | ||
| the administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, to the | ||
| president of the Senate and speaker of the House of Representatives | ||
| of the United States Congress, and to all the members of the Texas | ||
| delegation to Congress with the request that this resolution be | ||
| entered in the Congressional Record as a memorial to the Congress of | ||
| the United States of America. | ||
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