| on Feb 4, 2008, 12:00 AM E.S.T.
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Page 3 of 3
The Times article lists a more obvious example:
Heavy
industry has reason to fear. At least one part of the environmental
community believes the bear's listing would provide the leverage to
stop a coal-fired power plant thousands of miles away from the Arctic.
Sen.
Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.), who is known for his skepticism about
global-warming measures, asked U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director
H. Dale Hall last week whether listing the polar bear could be used to
halt the construction of a new power plant in Oklahoma City.
"The
Endangered Species Act is not the vehicle to reach out and demand all
of the things that need to happen to address climate change," Hall
said, to Inhofe's apparent satisfaction.
Andrew E. Wetzler,
director of the Natural Resources Defense Council's endangered species
project, said Hall misunderstands the legal principles underlying the
act, which was fortified by a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling that carbon dioxide can be regulated as a pollutant.
If
the builders of a coal-fired plant needed a federal permit, they would
probably have to show how its emissions would not erode the polar
bear's habitat or jeopardize its survival, Wetzler said.
If the drive to get the polar bear listed succeeds, the opportunity for environmentalist mischief will be boundless. Source
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