March 29, 2011
Rather than requiring plants to use the sensible closed cycle cooling option, which reduces intake flows (and dead fish) by 95-98% by simply recycling the cooling water, EPA’s new rule would allow existing plants to continue to use the antiquated “once-through” cooling method as long as they attach buckets and other gizmos to their intake screens designed to try to catch fish that bounce off the screens and return them to open water.
As for the organisms that get sucked up through the screens and “entrained” in the cooling water system itself, EPA’s new rule simply punts. Reduction in death by “entrainment” is simply left to a case-by-case permitting process to be administered by the states. This puts an untenable burden on the states, which we've seen clearly lack the resources and expertise to make these determinations.
Particularly troubling is the prominent role that EPA appears to have given to cost-benefit analysis in justifying this toothless rule. You may remember that this rulemaking was in the news two years ago, when EPA’s last effort at drafting a cooling water rule for existing facilities went up to the Supreme Court. This case was closely watched in the environmental community because it presented to the Court the decades-old battle between industry and environmentalists over the use of cost-benefit analysis in environmental rulemaking. (Industry likes cost-benefit analysis and environmentalists hate it because it tends to undercount the benefits of environmental protection, which are hard to put a dollar value on.)
It is particularly distressing, then, to see EPA state in the preamble to this new rule that it is choosing to rely on cost-benefit analysis to justify the rule, even though the Supreme Court gave it the option not to. And it is further distressing to see that EPA is jumping through all sorts of hoops to perform exactly kind of “futile attempts at comprehensive monetization” that the Supreme Court warned against—trying to attach a dollar value to all the fish and other aquatic organisms that we don’t actually fish for or eat but that nonetheless form invaluable links in the food chain and the overall web of life in our rivers, lakes, and oceans.
“Quantifying and monetizing reductions in [impingement and entrainment] mortality losses due to the regulatory options is extremely challenging. . . . EPA believes that some potentially significant benefit categories have not been fully monetized, and thus the national monetized benefits presented below likely underestimate total benefits, challenging the Agency’s ability to base [best technology available] decision making on the relationship of quantified costs and benefits alone.”
Ultimately, the results of the cost-benefit analysis present only a “partial” measure of benefits. Acknowledging that it is comparing a complete estimate of costs to an incomplete estimate of benefits, the agency pegs the (complete) costs of its proposed rule at $384 million a year and the (incomplete) benefits at $18 million a year. Buried in a chart is the fact that requiring closed cycle cooling at the biggest plants would cause even the incomplete accounting of benefits to jump 7-fold up to $121 million, but EPA doesn’t draw attention to that fact. The agency also promises that it will try to beef up its benefits estimate by continuing to work on its “stated preference survey”—a controversial method that essentially uses a public opinion poll to try to divine how much value people attach to various fish species and aquatic ecosystems. This survey will simply produce more fruitless agency wheel-spinning without getting us any closer to a “right” answer.
But from a broader perspective (looking beyond this particular rule) perhaps the most troubling aspect of EPA’s action is its decision to voluntarily go out of its way to waste valuable time and resources on a highly formalized, monetized cost-benefit analysis when it clearly doesn’t have to. Even if the agency can get high enough results from its “stated preference survey” to produce a quantified benefits estimate for its proposed rule as high as its costs, those estimates will be highly controversial and contestable. Industry has already filed hundreds of pages of comments with EPA complaining about every aspect of the methodology underlying EPA’s “survey.” While cost-benefit analysis promises the holy grail of scientific certainty in public policy making, when applied to intangibles like fish and endangered species and ecosystems, it delivers only controversy and fodder for contestation and delay.