New Report Says EPA Used Dubious Methodology to Justify Weakening the Clean Water Act

Report co-authored by UMass Amherst economist David Keiser says EPA analysis assumes states will step in to protect waterways as wetlands and streams lose federal protection
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David Keiser
David Keiser

AMHERST, Mass. – The Trump administration’s decision to remove federal Clean Water Act protections from millions of acres of wetlands and millions of miles of streams is based on dubious methodology and flawed logic, according to a new report by environmental economists from leading research institutions across the U.S, including the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Army Corps of Engineers repealed the Obama-era Clean Water Rule, which clarified which bodies of water fell under federal protection from pollution under the 1972 Clean Water Act. Earlier this year, the agencies replaced that rule with the new Navigable Waters Protection Rule, which removes isolated wetlands and ephemeral and intermittent streams from federal pollution protection.

“The EPA’s decision to make major changes to the rules protecting the nation’s waterways relies on economic analysis that may underestimate the benefits of streams and wetlands, especially as they affect waters downstream,” said David Keiser, associate professor of resource economics at UMass Amherst and co-author of the Report on the Repeal of the Clean Water Rule and its Replacement with the Navigable Waters Protection Rule to Define Waters of the United States. “The EPA also failed to adhere to its own guidelines. The new rule includes many contradictions that are inconsistent with the best available science,” Keiser said.

The rule change makes it much easier for developers, agricultural operations, oil and gas companies and mining companies to dredge, fill, divert and dump pollution into ephemeral streams and isolated wetlands. The researchers report that ripple effects could include worsening water pollution, loss of habitat for birds, fish and other species, diminished recreational waterways, more frequent algal blooms and increased flood damage to communities as wetlands disappear.

According to a 2017 staff analysis by the EPA and the Army Corps, the new rule leaves over half of U.S. wetlands and 18% of U.S. streams unprotected, including 35% of streams in the arid West.

The researchers say that while developing the rule, the EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers considered water quality as only a “local public good.” This ignores extensive scientific research that shows that even ephemeral streams and isolated wetlands are connected to larger watersheds, so what happens upstream affects waterways downstream, increasing the risk of flooding, diminishing water quality, and causing other problems that don’t stop at state borders. The report, published by the External Environmental Economics Advisory Committee (E-EEAC), finds that this artificially narrow view skewed benefit-cost analyses in a way that favored removing regulations.

The agencies also relied on some questionable assumptions, the authors say. For example, EPA projections of nationwide benefits assumed that every state — from arid places like Nevada or Arizona to wetland-rich states like Florida — has the same baseline number of wetland acres. Additionally, the agencies based their benefit-cost analyses on the assumption that leaving streams and wetlands unprotected won’t cause any harm to water quality in many states, because those states will rush in to protect waterways as needed.

“Experience shows that’s just not credible,” said Sheila Olmstead of the University of Texas at Austin, a report co-author. “We have a real-world apples-to-apples comparison to look at: When the Supreme Court removed federal protection from many U.S. wetlands by overturning the Migratory Bird Rule in 2001, only a few states moved to expand their own jurisdiction over some of the affected waters over the next 20 years. Given this prior behavior, EPA’s prediction that dozens of states will move to protect wetlands and streams this time around seems highly unlikely. In addition, assuming that many states will enact new legislation that doesn’t currently exist violates EPA’s own Guidelines for Preparing Economic Analysis.”

“Environmental federalism” – the theory that states do a better job at environmental regulation than the national government – can work in some situations, but is not supported in this case, the report’s authors say. President-elect Joe Biden has said his administration will review the Trump administration’s decision to remove Clean Water Act protection from wetlands and intermittent streams. But reversing that decision could be messy – at least a dozen court cases have been filed so far, and defining the protected waters of the United States has been the subject of debate for decades.

“The Biden Administration will attempt to respond to a number of EPA rule rollbacks undertaken by the Trump Administration. This report points to how a Biden Administration can correct structural weaknesses in this rule as well as other important EPA policies,” said J.R. DeShazo, who directs UCLA’s Luskin Center of Innovation and is a founding co-chair of the E-EEAC, an independent organization committed to providing the best available economic advice to the EPA.

In addition to Keiser and Olmstead, co-authors include Kevin Boyle of Virginia Tech, Victor Flatt of the University of Houston, Bonnie Keeler of the University of Minnesota, Daniel Phaneuf of the University of Wisconsin, Joseph S. Shapiro of the University of California Berkeley and Jay Shimshack of the University of Virginia.

The complete report, along with graphics and a fact sheet, is available online via the E-EEAC.