The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is taking a look at the factors that may attribute to the differences between the Agency’s “projected” and the “actual” costs of meeting various regulatory mandates. Preliminary findings appear to show that EPA has overestimated the cost of the rules that currently are under analysis. However, ϲʿԤ’s experience over the last decade has found the exact opposite; namely that EPA consistently underestimates compliance costs.
The interim report, , actively examines the processes and factors that affect how EPA forecasts the costs of its environmental regulations. EPA recently released an interim report on its progress and challenges so far. The preliminary findings of five initial case studies suggest that EPA overestimated the costs of several rules; however, the report is not conclusive and represents only a small subset of regulatory and other policy actions taken by the EPA.
EPA Consistently Underestimates Industry Costs, ϲʿԤ Finds
In evaluating any new EPA requirement(s), ϲʿԤ looks to EPA’s economic analysis for the Agency’s assessment of what it would cost industry to comply with the rule under development. In many cases, ϲʿԤ (and related industry groups) have found that EPA has significantly underestimated the cost and burden that its proposed rule(s) would have on industry. Following are some noteworthy examples—
- Lead-Paint Requirements for Target Housing and Child-Care Facilities – EPA underestimated the cost and overestimated the benefits of the , according to a July 25 from its own Office of the Inspector General. The report is consistent with ϲʿԤ’s own findings and reflects what members of Congress have told the agency since the rule was announced four years ago. EPA has been asked to re-examine costs and benefits of the rule.
- Stormwater Runoff Requirements for Construction Sites – In August 2010, EPA abruptly decided to abandon the on the amount of sediment that can cloud the water running off of construction sites. ϲʿԤ and the National Association of Home Builders had combined forces to submit detailed comments demonstrating that and impact of a nationwide numeric turbidity limit. EPA continues to collect more information on the effectiveness of existing stormwater treatment technologies at construction sites before proposing a “corrected limit” on stormwater runoff from construction sites.
- Clean Water Act (Section 404) Permits for Construction Work in US Waters/Wetlands – ϲʿԤ continues to urge EPA and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to abandon the agencies’ proposed “wetlands guidance” that describes the agencies’ view of their authority to regulate all waters and wetlands and significantly changes and expands which water features are subject to federal jurisdiction and permit requirements under the Clean Water Act (CWA). A – commissioned by ϲʿԤ and other industry groups that make up the Waters Advocacy Coalition – finds that the agencies’ have failed to consider many major categories of impacts and significantly underestimated the cost of implementing the proposed guidance. The guidance remains under final review at the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB). to tell your Members of Congress that EPA has gone too far.
- Heavy-Duty Truck Emissions Standards -- The automotive industry recently released a report that calls into question EPA’s cost analysis of emissions control requirements for model year 2004-2010 commercial trucks. Industry collected data (e.g., sales invoices and related documents) show that EPA significantly underestimated industry compliance costs (the Agency’s estimates were off by a factor of between two and five). The report – click here– finds that EPA’s rule has resulted in substantially higher prices for commercial vehicles and slower sales than what EPA originally predicted, leading to delayed environmental benefits. It also calls into question EPA's and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's ability to make long-term cost projections on technology that has not yet been commercialized.