EPA Slaps Curbs on Power Plant Emissions Linked to Acid Rain

Dangerous emissions from coal-fired power plants often blow across state lines and foul the air, land and water many miles away.

To combat that drifting pollution, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has issued new standards to reduce discharges contributing to soot, smog and acid rain from hundreds of power plants in 28 states.

EPA officials say improved air quality resulting from the new Cross-State Air Pollution Rule could prevent up to 34,000 premature deaths, 15,000 nonfatal heart attacks and hundreds of thousands of cases respiratory ailments every year.

The new regulations, which replace rules issued by the George W. Bush administration that a judge voided in 2008,  takes aim specifically at sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide. As The New York Times reports, it is a significant toughening of acid rain controls under the Clean Air Act, and it applies to all the states east of the Rockies except the Dakotas, Delaware and the six New England states.

As The Wall Street Journal reports, the Cross-State Air Pollution Rule is one of roughly a half-dozen measures targeting pollution from fossil fuels that the EPA is expected to adopt or propose over the next two years.

The next big decision facing the agency is whether to tighten the definition of what constitutes unsafe levels of ground-level ozone, a primary ingredient in smog.  Smokestack industries, as well as their closest supporters in Congress, have warned that tighter standards will raise energy costs and hurt business.

The agency has said that decision would come by the end of this month, but EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson hinted Thursday that it might take longer.

STUART SILVERSTEIN

Related Posts:
Regulators Shelve Rules to Curb Air Pollution From Industrial Broilers
EPA Airs New Emissions Rules for Coal-Fired Power Plants

 

 

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One comment to “EPA Slaps Curbs on Power Plant Emissions Linked to Acid Rain”

  1. James

    I thought the bogus acid rain scare was disproved years ago at great expense to the taxpayers.

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