Among those supply chain groups resisting the latest greenhouse gasses legislation is the The National Association of Manufacturers (NAM).
In a statement issued late last week, executive NAM’s vice president Jay Timmons told Senator Lisa Murkowski’s (R-Alaska) his organization was issuing a "resolution of disapproval" to prohibit the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from regulating greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act: "Manufacturers encourage Senators to vote in favor of the ‘resolution of disapproval’ and to stop the EPA from moving forward with its overreaching and economically destructive agenda," he said.
Beginning in January 2011, the EPA plans to begin requiring certain manufacturers to obtain permits for their new facilities that exceed 75,000 tons of greenhouse gas emissions with other facilities of different sizes being phased in.
According to NAM, these costly new burdens create uncertainty, stifle job creation and harm manufacturers’ ability to compete in a global economy that does not have similar restrictions.
Furthermore, said NAM, the EPA’s new regulations not only expand the Agency’s power but come with no guidance from Congress.
"The Clean Air Act was never intended to control or regulate greenhouse gas emissions, and the EPA is ill-equipped to carry out this task," said NAM spokesmen, noting that it will have dire consequences for distribution of U.S. goods.
SC
MR

Latest Supply Chain News
- Last-mile delivery success begins before the driver arrives
- The Digital Supply Chain Imperative: From Visibility to Execution
- Elucidating import container flows: A simulation study of Port of New York/New Jersey
- AI runs on compute; scaling it runs on logistics
- Wayfair executive to share lessons from building a tech-driven delivery network in NextGen Keynote
- More News
Latest Podcast

Explore
Latest Supply Chain News
- Wayfair executive to share lessons from building a tech-driven delivery network in NextGen Keynote
- Surging AI adoption doesn’t match mass layoff narrative
- Tillamook turns supply chain planning into growth engine
- Schneider Electric again tops Gartner’s Top 25 Supply Chain rankings
- The real reason supply chain tech ROI falls short
- Why supply chains fail at launch: It’s not the plan, it’s the execution
- More latest news
Latest Resources

Subscribe

Supply Chain Management Review delivers the best industry content.

Editors’ Picks
