A dozen states and cities are jointly threatening to sue the Environmental  Protection Agency over its failure to impose carbon emissions standards on power  plants.  New York is among the states and environmental groups that reached a late  2010 settlement with  EPA in which the agency committed to setting rules for new and existing  plants. The 11 other parties signing the notice include the states of  Connecticut, Vermont, Oregon, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, and the cities of  New York and the District of Columbia.
The formal notice  of intent to sue delivered Wednesday comes after EPA missed a mid-April  deadline to complete already-delayed emissions standards for new power  plants.  EPA has not provided a timetable for completing the rule. This 60-day notice  is required under the Clean Air Act before an enforcement lawsuit may be  filed.  
While the Obama Administration has pledged to combat climate change, the  Environmental Protection Agency has now missed the deadline for adopting New  Source Performance Standards (NSPS) to limit greenhouse gas emissions from  new fossil fuel power plants
In addition to missing the  deadline for rules for existing plants, EPA has also not moved ahead with  emissions guidelines for existing power plants, which are on a slower  track.
Green groups sent a separate notice to EPA this week that  similarly threatened litigation to force EPA’s hand.  (The Hill, 4/17/2013)
Thursday, 18 April 2013
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