Cliffside setback??
From NC WARN: This ruling should delay the Cliffside project at least two months, drive the price even higher, and seriously impair chances that the plant will ever be built. It’s also a mighty blow against polluting utilities and their control over our government.
NC WARN's press release:
Federal court ruling will send Cliffside air permit back to the drawing board for more stringent mercury controls
Washington, D.C,. A federal court ruling today will require the N.C. Division of Air Quality to re-evaluate Duke Energy’s plans to control mercury at the utility’s recently permitted Cliffside unit. The D.C Circuit Court of Appeals ruled today that EPA violated the Clean Air Act when it removed oil- and coal-fired power plants from the list of hazardous air pollution sources that are subject to the Acts most stringent air pollution controls. As a result, air permits for new coal plants such as Cliffside must be based on a case-by-case analysis of the maximum available control technology for mercury and other hazardous air pollutants.
The N.C. Division of Air Quality (DAQ) issued a final air permit for the new Cliffside unit just last week, on January 28 that allows the new Cliffside unit to emit 133 pounds of mercury each year. In January, SELC notified DAQ of the anticipated federal decision and urged the Division to consider these expected mercury regulations when developing its final permit.
However, DAQ’s permit does not require a a case-specific analysis of maximum available control technology (MACT) for mercury, and the permit does not require Duke to install mercury-specific pollution control equipment. Note from NC WARN: The D.C. Circuit’s ruling means that DAQ must rescind the final Cliffside air permit, go back to the drawing board to conduct a case-specific MACT analysis, and issue a revised draft permit for public comment before finalizing a new permit.
Because mercury is classified as hazardous, the Clean Air Act requires EPA to identify its sources and develop the most stringent standards to control emissions from those sources. The court ruled today that EPA acted illegally when it took power plants off the list of hazardous pollution sources when issuing its Clean Air Mercury Rule.
Released in May 2005, the federal Clean Air Mercury Rule exempted power plants from the most stringent Clean Air Act requirements to control mercury and instead instituted a flawed cap and trade scheme, which allows facilities to trade mercury pollution credits with other less-polluting power plants. As a result of the D.C. Circuit’s ruling today, EPA and the states must now develop tougher regulations to control mercury and other toxic pollutants from new and existing power plants, the leading source of mercury pollution in the country. Today’s ruling could result in a 95 percent or greater reduction of mercury emissions from coal-fired power plants
Mercury emitted from power plants deposits in water bodies, where it is converted to its most toxic form, methylmercury. Methylmercury exposure from eating contaminated fish is linked to permanent damage to the central nervous system.Developing fetuses, breast-fed infants and children exposed to methylmercury are at risk for lowered intelligence and learning disabilities. Adults exposed to even low amounts of methylmercury also may be at higher risk for altered sensation, impaired hearing and vision, and motor disturbances. EPA estimates that as many as than 600,000 children are born each year with unhealthy levels of methylmercury in their bodies. Despite this figure, EPA adopted the flawed mercury rule ignoring the counsel of its own Children’s Health Public Advisory Committee and thousands of health professionals nationwide.
Public radio is reporting Duke officials say that this ruling won’t stop Cliffside. Stay tuned…!
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Awesome
1 Thessalonians 5:21: But examine everything carefully; hold fast to that which is good.
More on mercury
If you aren't worried about greenhouse gases, you might want to consider being worried about this..
B-b-but we need more 'lectricty! We have to have more 'lectricity. To which I say: FIND ANOTHER WAY.
It's about time we got some good news
on this subject. Yay!
Also...if I'm not mistaken, I believe Duke's permit application (which I posted in an earlier thread) listed the mercury emissions for the new Cliffside plant at around 275 lbs. per year, but they may have made promises to DAQ that those would be cut in half.
Mercury emissions
would definitely increase with the new plant, and no regulatory agency really monitors the levels that seep into the ground and then ground waters. Unbelievably NC has an antiquated law that allows an extremely thin layer of cover (I forget the exact dimensions, but it something ridiculous like 1/8 thick) to sit between the coal sludge that comes out of the pulverized plant stored in giant pits and the ground. Thicker cover is required for our landfills.
All pollutants increase with this new plant, NOX, SOX, mercury, arsenic, carbon, etc.....yet Duke uses twisted math to deduct offset from plants that they will retire (which the Supreme Court ruled are illegal) to claim that they won't make things worse for our kids who eat, drink and breathe this stuff. In the meanwhile our planet's climate is changing rapidly due to the dangerous levels of carbon we're spewing into the atmosphere.
mercury and other poisons in china
I wish people who want companies to have free rein to pollute would visit China sometime. Letting pollutants run unchecked has resulted in a lot of kids in orphanages with one arm, part of a leg, many other deformities. In my 50 plus years, I have never seen an American kid with the physical problems that are more and more common there.
There is no perfectly safe world, but it is pretty obvious that we must stay firm with corporations who leave their waste in places they will never live.
EPA is still around?
I thought Bush had replaced all those Fed judges with spines?