Bush reversed attempt to ban gas additive MTBE

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WASHINGTON – The Bush administration quietly shelved a proposal to ban a gasoline additive that contaminates drinking water in many communities, helping an industry that has donated more than $1 million to Republicans. The Environmental Protection Agency’s decision had its origin in the early days…
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WASHINGTON – The Bush administration quietly shelved a proposal to ban a gasoline additive that contaminates drinking water in many communities, helping an industry that has donated more than $1 million to Republicans.

The Environmental Protection Agency’s decision had its origin in the early days of President Bush’s tenure when his administration decided not to move ahead with a Clinton-era regulatory effort to ban the clean-air additive methyl tertiary-butyl ether, known as MTBE.

The proposed regulation said the environmental harm of the additive leaching into groundwater overshadowed its beneficial effects to the air.

The Bush administration decided to leave the issue to Congress, where it has bogged down over a proposal to shield the industry from some lawsuits. That initiative is being led by House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas.

The Associated Press obtained a draft of the proposed regulation that former President Clinton’s EPA sent to the White House on its last full day in office in January 2001.

It said: “The use of MTBE as an additive in gasoline presents an unreasonable risk to the environment.”

The EPA document went on to say that “low levels of MTBE can render drinking water supplies unpotable due to its offensive taste and odor,” and the additive should be phased out over four years.

“Unlike other components of gasoline, MTBE dissolves and spreads readily in the groundwater … resists biodegradation and is more difficult and costly to remove.”

On their own, 17 states banned the additive and dozens of communities are suing the oil industry. Maine discontinued the sale of MTBE in 1998 when the gasoline additive began turning up in groundwater.

People say MTBE-contaminated water tastes like turpentine.

In Santa Monica, Calif., the oil industry will pay hundreds of millions of dollars because the additive contaminated the city’s water supply.

“We’re the poster child for MTBE, and it could take decades to clean this up,” said Joseph Lawrence, the assistant city attorney.

In 2000, the MTBE industry’s lobbying group told the Clinton administration that limiting MTBE’s use by regulation “would inflict grave economic harm on member companies.”

Three MTBE producers account for half of the additive’s daily output.

The three contributed $338,000 to George W. Bush’s presidential campaign, the Republican Party and Republican congressional candidates in 1999 and 2000, twice what they gave Democrats, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. Since then, the three producers have given just over $1 million to Republicans.

The producers are Texas-based Lyondell Chemical and Valero Energy and the Huntsman companies of Salt Lake City.

“This is a classic case of the Bush administration helping its campaign contributor friends at the expense of public health,” said Frank O’Donnell, executive director of the Clean Air Trust, a Washington-based environmental group.

Huntsman spokesman Don Olsen, echoing comments by other MTBE producers, said, “We were not a huge campaign contributor and this has absolutely nothing to do with campaign donations. It has to do with good public policy.”

The industry says it has become a victim in a Washington power struggle.

“Because of MTBE there has been a marked improvement in air quality and reduction in toxics in the air,” Olsen said. “Because of leaking underground storage tanks in some relatively few instances, MTBE found its way into places it shouldn’t be. But that has nothing to do with the product, which has done exactly what it was designed to do.”

Said Valero Energy spokeswoman Mary Rose Brown: “It would have been impossible to fulfill the requirements of the Clean Air Act without MTBE.”

A daily Washington newsletter disclosed the existence of the draft rule shortly after Bush’s inauguration; outside the industry, few people noticed.

At the direction of White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card and Mitch Daniels, then the White House’s budget director, all government agencies withdrew their pre-Inauguration Day draft regulations.

The EPA withdrew agency rules, including the MTBE one, in mid-February 2001, White House budget office spokesman Chad Kolton said.

In subsequent months, agencies rewrote many Clinton-era regulatory proposals and went public with them. The proposed MTBE regulation, however, never surfaced.

“As legislation looked more promising in 2002 and 2003, we focused our energies on supporting language in the Senate’s energy bill,” Jeffrey Holmstead, the EPA’s assistant administrator for air quality, said in a statement Friday.

“We have not ruled out the possibility of seeking a solution” by regulation, Holmstead said.

The EPA favors a phaseout of MTBE through legislation. But the legislation has stalled and it no longer calls for a ban in four years.


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