Chattanooga Times Free Press

EPA requests court delay on smog limits

- BY ALENE TCHEKMEDYI­AN LOS ANGELES TIMES (TNS)

When the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency adopted a stricter smog limit in 2015, forcing states to reduce emissions, many people were disappoint­ed.

At the time, the agency reduced the ground-level ozone standard to 70 parts per billion, down from the 75-ppb standard adopted in 2008 under the George W. Bush administra­tion.

Industry groups and some states criticized the standard as too strict, arguing it would hinder economic growth, while public health advocates and environmen­talists, who had called for a 60-ppb standard, argued the rule wasn’t protective enough.

Groups from both sides sued the EPA, which was set this month to defend the 2015 rule in court.

But now, at the request of the EPA, the case is on hold — and environmen­talists fear the Trump administra­tion will ditch the cleaner standard.

A federal appeals court panel this week agreed to suspend the case to give the EPA time to review, and possibly reconsider, the standard.

“In light of President Trump’s pro-growth agenda, EPA continues to carefully review the broad implicatio­ns of the 2015 ozone standard and ensure that we are supporting American jobs and protecting human health and the environmen­t,” EPA spokeswoma­n Liz Bowman said via email.

Environmen­tal and health groups filed court papers opposing the delay. They worried the move may signal plans by the EPA to weaken the standard or delay its implementa­tion.

“What’s at stake here is clean air,” said Seth Johnson, an attorney with Earthjusti­ce, which filed court papers opposing the agency’s request. “The Environmen­tal Protection Agency is supposed to make sure that the air gets cleaned up, and if they do put a pause on implementi­ng the standard, the air is going to stay dirtier for longer.”

Ozone is formed when pollution from cars, trucks, power plants and refineries cooks in the heat and sunlight. Exposure can trigger asthma attacks and other breathing problems. Johnson said any delay could lead to unnecessar­y deaths.

The new rule was expected to have the largest effect in California, which has some of the worst air quality in the nation and has in the past failed to meet smog standards. On 132 days last year, the ozone level in much of the greater Los Angeles area failed to meet the standard. Most of the violations occurred during summer months.

“L.A. has the worst ozone pollution in the country,” said Adrian Martinez, another Earthjusti­ce attorney. “We need the federal government setting stringent standards so California can protect us from dangerous smog.”

It’s not yet clear what changes, if any, the agency plans to make, but experts say it’s safe to assume the standard won’t get more strict. At the head of the agency now is Scott Pruitt, the former Oklahoma attorney general, who was part of a group that sued the EPA over the smog standard, arguing it was too restrictiv­e.

“It definitely calls the possibilit­y of loosening the requiremen­t, which would allow there to be a higher level of ozone” than the current rule allows, said Jim Rubin, an environmen­tal attorney.

The appeals court ordered the EPA to file status reports every 90 days on the agency’s review of the 2015 rule.

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