When Congress heads back to Washington in 2015, one of their first agenda items will be to block, delay or otherwise damage the . With the new Republican majorities in both houses, and , doing so could be a real possibility.
For coal states like West Virginia, Illinois, Montana and Wyoming, the fight over standards matters. The Clean Power Plan aims to reduce emissions, in part, . Right now, . If demand were to go down, the effect on these states' economies could be substantial.
Take Wyoming, for example. To say coal is important is an understatement. According to , income from mineral extraction makes up nearly 75 percent of the state's budget. Furthermore, about one-third of that comes from coal. That's how important coal is to the state.
Miners at the outside of Gillette, Wyoming wear stickers on their hard hats with the words "COAL, GUNS, FREEDOM," on them. It isn't just a job or a way of life... it's practically everything.
At , a popular bar in Gillette, coal miners and locals gather Thursday evenings for a weekly pool tournament. Ask many of them about the proposed Environmental Protection Agency regulations and you'll receive many answers. The general feeling, though, is this: We want to protect our environment, but the EPA should really stay out of our business.
Brandon Allee, who has worked in almost every sector of energy development, put it less delicately.
"Honestly, the EPA makes it a whole lot harder for most of us to do our jobs," Allee said. "My great-great-grandfather settled most of this area. I’ll tell you what, he would have shot half the EPA administrators. But that was what they did back then."
There is also a sense that outsiders do not understand how things work. With its subzero winters, tiny population, and decades-long love affair with energy, Wyoming is unique. It's a sentiment echoed by another tavern patron, Shawn Kistler.
"It is better to have the people who live in a state regulate it themselves," Kistler said. "And just like anything else, keep it small, it will regulate itself better. And you won't get too much bureaucratic bullshit."
It is within this context that will fight the EPA when Congress reconvenes. He is chair of the Senate Republican Policy Committee, whose mission is to " ...advance Republican policies by providing positions on legislation, floor debate, and votes," according to the committee's website.
So what is the Republican strategy in 2015? Senator Barrasso would not get into specifics, but reiterated his stance.
“The EPA, in my opinion, has now come out with more and more regulations which make energy more expensive. The costs are real, the benefits are theoretical,” he said.
The best bet for Republicans would likely be to defund the plan by attaching riders to important legislation. Ultimately, though, President Obama would have veto power and it is unlikely that Congress would have the two-thirds majority vote needed in each house to override a presidential veto.
Inside Energy is a public media collaboration, based in Colorado, Wyoming and North Dakota, focusing on the energy industry and its impacts.