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Obama EPA releases Bush-era global-warming finding
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - A controversial e-mail message buried by the Bush administration because of its conclusions on global warming surfaced Tuesday, nearly two years after it was sent to the White House and never opened.
The e-mail and the 28-page document attached to it, released Tuesday by the Environmental Protection Agency, show that in December 2007, the agency concluded that six gases linked to global warming pose dangers to public welfare and wanted to act to regulate their release from automobiles and the burning of gasoline.
The document cites global warming's effects on air quality, agriculture, forestry, water resources and coastal areas as endangering public welfare. That finding was rejected by the Bush White House, which opposed using the Clean Air Act to deal with climate change and stalled on producing a so-called "endangerment finding" ordered by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2007.
As a result, the Dec. 5 e-mail sent by the agency to Susan Dudley, who headed the regulatory division at the Office of Management and Budget, was never opened, according to Jason Burnett, the former EPA official that wrote it.
The Bush administration, and then-administrator of the EPA Stephen Johnson, also refused to release the document, which is labeled "deliberative, do not distribute," to Democratic lawmakers. The White House instead allowed three senators to review it in July 2008, when excerpts were released.
The Obama administration in April made a similar determination, but also concluded that greenhouse gases endanger public health. The EPA is drafting the first greenhouse-gas standards for automobiles, and recently signaled that it would attempt to reduce climate-altering pollution from refineries and other large industrial sources.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and Republican lawmakers have criticized the EPA's reasoning and called for a more thorough vetting of the science. An internal review by a dozen federal agencies released in May raised questions about the EPA's conclusion, saying the agency could have been more balanced, and highlighted the difficulty of linking global warming to health.
The agency released the e-mail and documents after receiving requests under the Freedom of Information Act.
Adora Andy, a spokeswoman for EPA administrator Lisa Jackson, said Tuesday that the draft shows that the science in 2007 was as clear as it is today.
"The conclusions reached then by the EPA scientists should have been made public and should have been considered," she said.


