By Lorraine Chow, EcoWatch.ย Reposted with permission fromย EcoWatch.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)ย announcedย Thursday its annual enforcement and complianceย reportย that boasted $1.6 billion in administrative and civil judicial fines againstย polluters.
โA strong enforcement program is essential to achieving positive health and environmental outcomes,โ Susan Bodine, head of the agency’s enforcement division said in aย statement.
However, analyses show that the penalties against polluters are significantly lower underย President Trump‘s EPA. According toย The Hill, that $1.6 billion figure is roughly a fifth of the $5.7 billion in penalties collected the year before under President Obama’s EPA.
In addition to that, theย Scott Pruitt-led agency is also taking credit for the previous administration’s enforcement efforts. The EPA 2017 enforcement report covers the federal fiscal year from Oct. 1, 2016 to Sept. 30, 2017, meaning the final tally covers three and half months of the Obama administration, โwhen some of the E.P.A.’s biggest cases were settled,โ as theย New York Timesย observed.
The largest chunk came fromย Volkswagen’sย $1.45 billion to resolve civil claims for its โdieselgateโ emissions scandal, which wasย announcedย on Jan. 11 โ before Trump was even swornย in.
Steven Chester, the deputy assistant administrator in EPA‘s compliance office from 2011 to 2014 told The Hill that he is concerned about the drop in litigation and enforcement and its consequences for theย environment.
โMy big concern is that if there isn’t a viable threat of litigation and enforcement, if there aren’t an appropriate number of lawsuits or complaints brought, that you lose that deterrent effect โ and if you rely too heavily on compliance assistance you are going to end up with more non-compliance,โ heย said.
Chester said that the most noticeable change in the 2017 enforcement report was the drop in the EPA‘s recommendations to the Justice Department (DOJ) to prosecute polluters, from 152 the year before to 110ย now.
โThose numbers tell you what’s in the pipeline and what’s going to be in the pipeline in future years,โ Chester said. โThose might not look like big numbers but these are huge numbers because these are cases referred to DOJ, these are cases that DOJ is going toย fine.โ
RELATED:ย In First 6 Months Under Trump, Polluters Already Paying Lower Fines to EPA [INFOGRAPHIC]ย ย
Main image: President Donald Trump, flanked by Vice President Mike Pence and EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt. Credit: U.S. Department of the Interior, publicย domain
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