364. Action Memorandum From the Assistant Secretary of State for Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs (Negroponte) to Secretary of State Shultz1
SUBJECT
- Ozone Negotiations: Letter to Attorney General Meese
ISSUE FOR DECISION
Whether to write to Attorney General Meese, in his capacity as Chairman of the Domestic Policy Council (DPC), expressing your strong support for the current U.S. position in the international negotiations on protection of the ozone layer, and to propose making a decision from the President, if necessary, in order to avoid further delay caused by opposition from certain DPC agencies.
BACKGROUND
After several months of negotiation under auspices of the United Nations Environment Programme, an international accord on protection of the stratospheric ozone layer is within reach, largely on U.S. terms.2 Many regard this issue as the most important priority on the global environmental agenda. Due mainly to efforts by the Department, USIA, and Lee Thomas, many nations have changed their positions and followed the U.S. lead in considering a freeze in production of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), followed by significant reductions. A Conference of Plenipotentiaries is scheduled for mid-September in Montreal to complete the negotiation and sign the protocol.
The U.S. position in this negotiation was developed through intensive interagency deliberations (which included the Justice Department) leading up to, and following, the approval by Allen Wallis of a Circular 175 authority last November.3 Recently, however, some agencies in the DPC—primarily Interior and OSTP—have raised questions both about the underlying science and about the effects of CFC reductions on US industry.4 Interior argues that since European Community (EC) countries and Japan did not follow the US near-total ban of CFCs as [Page 1040] aerosol propellants in 1978, they should be required to do so before further reductions are scheduled. The US in fact proposed this four years ago,5 and it was rejected on the grounds that, even with the aerosol ban, US per capita use of CFCs exceeds the EC, and that most of the long-lived CFCs which will continue for decades to damage the ozone layer originated from US production.
Positions proposed by Interior and OSTP would undo the progress achieved to date and make the Administration appear less serious about protecting the ozone layer than the EC and many other countries (see articles at Tab B from the Washington Post and Wall Street Journal).6 Such a U.S. policy reversal would damage our international credibility, unleash major domestic criticism, and probably result in unilateral U.S. control actions.
Lee Thomas and I believe that the U.S. position is responsible and pragmatic, prudently addressing the environmental risks while providing a market stimulus and a reasonable time-frame for industry to develop alternative products. We believe that the DPC process is not functioning well, and could cause needless embarrassment to the Administration on an issue which is attracting growing attention from Congress and public interest groups. We therefore propose that you write directly to Meese in an effort to re-establish a credible U.S. negotiating position. The National Security Council staff concurs in this judgment.
Under Secretary Wallis approved this letter before he left today. I would be pleased to discuss further details if you wish.
Recommendation:
That you sign the letter to Mr. Meese at Tab A.
[Page 1041]- Source: Reagan Library, Papers of George P. Shultz, Environment—CFC’s. Confidential. Drafted by Butcher and Benedick and cleared in D, E, L, EB, EPA, and NSC. Smith signed for Negroponte. A typed notation under the dateline reads: “(Copy of Original Signed Letter Given to Scott Thayer, 6/1/87, 10:30 a.m.—BKK.”↩
- See Document 362.↩
- See Document 355.↩
- See Document 363.↩
- See Document 349.↩
- See Cass Peterson, “Administration Ozone Policy May Favor Sunglasses, Hats,” Washington Post, May 29, 1987, and Robert E. Taylor, “Advice on Ozone May Be: ‘Wear Hats And Stand in Shade,” Wall Street Journal, May 29, 1987. Attached but not printed.↩
- Confidential. Drafted by Butcher and Benedick on May 29 and cleared in D, E, L, EB, EPA, and NSC. A typed notation in the upper left-hand margin reads: “COPY GIVEN TO SCOTT THAYER, 6/1, 10:30 a.m. by S/S.”↩
- See Document 362.↩
- Undated, attached but not printed is a summary of the protocol.↩
- Shultz signed “George” above his typed name.↩