WASHINGTON (AP) — In what environmentalists hailed as a victory for efforts to curb climate change, an appeals panel in Washington on Thursday rebuffed efforts to delay enforcement of President Barack Obama’s plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions until legal challenges are resolved.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit issued an order denying requests for a stay that would have barred the Environmental Protection Agency from implementing the Clean Power Plan.
The plan has been challenged by more than two dozen mostly Republican-led states and allied business and industry groups tied to fossil fuels. The states deride the carbon-cutting plan as an “unlawful power grab” that will kill coal-mining jobs and drive up electricity costs.
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Thursday’s order allows federal regulation of carbon emissions pending the court’s review of the case, set for June 2.
“This is a huge win for protecting our health and climate from dangerous carbon pollution,” said David Doniger, director of the Climate and Clean Air Program at the advocacy group Natural Resources Defense Council. “The court has brushed aside the polluters’ bogus bid to block the Clean Power Plan, and the electricity sector will continue the shift from its high-pollution, dirty-fueled past to a safer, cleaner-powered future.”









