1970s:
Environmental Decade

Earth, Wind, and Fire

The Environmental President?

 Richard Nixon, 1969

          Positioning for re-election bid in 1972

Environmental Protection Agency

  Nixon panel recommendations, 1970

          Consolidate conservation programs

  Complications: politics and political friends

          Agriculture Dept. keeps Forest Service

          Commerce Dept. keeps programs of NOAA

                  NOAA created 1970 for air and ocean research

          Interior Dept. loses EPA

                  Sec. Walter Hickel a critic of Kent State

  First director: William D. Ruckelshaus

          Ability, charisma, committed staff, support of Congress & environmentalists ensure success

EPA’s challenges

  Research & advisory roles & watchdog over 247 air quality control regions

          Review state implementation plans

          Oversee monitoring

          Penalize polluting plants & industries

  Achievements:

          Inventory polluting industries

          Air quality standards for many pollutants

          Protect health as well as crops, plants, wildlife, soil, & water

New Legislation

  National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), 1970

          Environmental impact statements

  1969: Justice Dept. investigates auto company conspiracy against pollution control devices

  Clean Air Act of 1970

          Cut auto emissions 90% by 1975

          Requires national air quality standards

  Endangered Species Act of 1973

          Protection of “critical habitat”

Tightening regulation

  Water Pollution Control Act amendments, 1972

          No discharges by 1985; latest technology required; billions appropriated for new construction

The toxic environment

  Workplace health: Occupational Health & Safety Act of 1970 (OSHA)

  Toxic chemical regulation

          Pesticides: FIFRA, 1972; herbicides added, 1978

          Chemicals: Toxic Substances Control Act, 1976

  1972 EPA mandate: list toxic chemicals, standard

          Scientific data complex, missing, contradictory

  National Resources Defense Council suits

          Enforceable list of 65 chemicals, out of 1000s

  Industry demand variances case-by-case

          Ties up EPA; hope for friendlier administration

 

Age of Limits

  1972: Club of Rome’s Limits to Growth

          Apocalypticism, doom, Malthusianism

Limits Are Here:
The First Oil Crisis

  Nixon ends of election-year price controls, 1973

          Shortages, inflation

  1973 Arab-Israeli War: OPEC oil embargo

          High gas prices and recession

  Emergency legislation

          Cut energy consumption, expand energy supply

          Power plants switch from oil to coal

          Huge strip-mining operations in West

          Easing of emission limits for plants & industry

Era of limits

  President Gerald Ford, 1974-1977

  Energy crisis, economic stagnation

          Inflation, recession

          Deindustrialization: the “Rust Belt”

Jimmy Carter

  Georgia governor, outsider; defeats Ford, 1976

  Failed energy proposal

           55 mph highway speed limit

           Department of Energy, 1977

                  Funds for research in solar and wind energy

           Renewed oil crisis, 1979

Toxic chemical horror stories

  Love Canal at Niagara Falls, NY , 1978

          Miscarriages, birth defects, liver ills

          Carter: national emergency; buys 240 homes

  Media stories on toxics, cancer, illness

          “Valley of the Drums” in Kentucky

                  17,000 leaky steel drums in open field

          Times Beach, Missouri

                  Oil mixed with dioxin used on roads

                  1983: town evacuated

Clean-up

  EPA Superfund (CERCLA) created 1980

          Mission: clean up toxic waste dumps

          Banned certain chemicals

  EPA regulates waste transport, dumping

 

End of Nuclear Power

  Push to develop nuclear power

  Three Mile Island incident, Penn., 1979

          Near disaster; release of some radiation

  Construction costs skyrocket

          Nuclear Regulatory Commission (created 1975) safety standards

          Activists fight completion of plants

  Chernobyl disaster, 1986

          100 times more radiation than Hiroshima

  Reactor orders after 1974 never completed

Distribution of cesium-137
10 years after Chernobyl