COVID-19 Update: Due to the current situation, here are some helpful resources | Learn More

Energy commissioner blasts EPA climate rule

By Timothy Cama – 12/02/14

A member of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) blasted the Obama administration’s climate rule, saying it would threaten electricity reliability and cost hundreds of billions of dollars.

Philip Moeller, appointed to the FERC in 2006 by President George W. Bush, said the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) proposal to cut carbon emissions from power plants is deeply flawed.

“EPA’s proposed rule will dramatically interfere with America’s competitive market forces, perhaps resulting in even more greenhouse gases in the future,” Moeller wrote in formal comments submitted late Monday to the EPA.

He also said he is concerned that the rule’s cost “could total hundreds of billions of dollars” and threaten the reliability of the country’s electrical delivery system.

“I continue to call for a more formal and transparent process involving FERC (and not just its staff) to examine these reliability implications,” he said. “There is a need to involve electric engineering expertise for an open dialogue and debate over what changes to the grid and energy network are feasible and cost-effective in a reasonable time frame.”

Read the rest on the Hill

« Back to the news archive