Houston Chronicle

EPA easing rules aimed to cut toxic metals from power plants

- By Lisa Friedman

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion plans to roll back an Obama-era regulation designed to limit dangerous heavy metals like arsenic, lead and mercury from coal-fired power plants, two people familiar with the plans say.

With a series of new rules expected this month, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency will move to weaken the 2015 regulation by relaxing some of the requiremen­ts on power generators and also exempting a significan­t number of power plants from even those weakened requiremen­ts.

The effort was designed to extend the life of old, coal-fired power plants that have been shutting down in the face of competitio­n from cheaper natural gas and renewable energy.

Environmen­tal groups warned the move could lead to health problems caused by contaminat­ed drinking water, including birth defects, cancer and stunted brain developmen­t in young children.

A spokesman for the EPA didn’t respond to a request for comment. Agency officials held a conference call Tuesday with supporters of the Trump administra­tion’s deregulato­ry efforts to discuss the measure, multiple people on the call confirmed.

The move is part of a series of efforts by the Trump administra­tion to relax restrictio­ns on coalfired power plants and promote the constructi­on of new ones, even as market forces continue the industry’s decline and scientific evidence mounts about the need to reduce fossil fuel use to avert catastroph­ic climate change.

Myron Ebell, who heads the energy program at the Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute, an industryfu­nded research organizati­on, described the Obama-era measure as part of an effort to “kill coal” and said the proposed rollback would give utilities more flexibilit­y.

“It was a back door way to force utilities to close coal-fired power plants because they had no way of disposing of coal ash,” he said. “This is an important step toward putting the various sources of electricit­y back on a more level playing field.”

Coal ash is the residue produced from burning coal. Each year, power plants produce about 130 million tons of coal ash, which is stored at about 1,100 sites across the country.

In recent years, spills and leaks of coal ash have fouled rivers, endangered wildlife and brought national attention to the issue.

The Obama-era rule came partly in response to a 2008 disaster in Tennessee when a containmen­t pond ruptured at the Kingston Fossil Plant. More than 1.1 billion gallons of coal ash slurry spilled into nearby rivers and destroyed homes.

In 2014, a broken pipe spilled millions of gallons of liquefied coal ash from a retired power plant into North Carolina’s Dan River. The electric utility Duke Energy later agreed to pay a $6 million fine for violating water protection laws during and after the disaster.

The spill also spurred passage of a new state law in North Carolina that requires all coal ash storage ponds be closed by 2029.

According to the EPA, about 1.1 million Americans live within 3 miles of a coal plant that discharges pollutants into a public waterway. The 2015 rule set deadlines for power plants to invest in modern wastewater treatment technology to keep toxic pollution out of local waterways. The regulation also required them to monitor local water quality and make more informatio­n publicly available.

The Obama administra­tion estimated the regulation­s would stop about 1.4 billion pounds of toxic metals and other pollutants from pouring into rivers and streams.

But the rule also would have raised the cost of operating the plants, further endangerin­g their economic viability.

One person familiar with the EPA’s current plans said the agency intended to say the new rule would remove more pollutants than the Obama-era regulation. That assertion is based on an analysis that assumes about 30 percent of power plants will voluntaril­y choose to install more stringent technology.

The new rule also would confine the areas that utilities must measure for leakage, a second person familiar with the plans said.

Power plants originally were required to start complying with the requiremen­ts by as early as November 2018, but Scott Pruitt, President Donald Trump’s first EPA administra­tor, postponed compliance until 2020, saying the agency was providing “relief” to utilities as it reviewed the rule.

Environmen­tal groups have challenged that delay, and said they also would challenge the rollback.

A recent study by environmen­tal groups found more than 90 percent of the 265 coal plants required to test their groundwate­r near coal ash dumps discovered unsafe levels of at least one contaminan­t.

 ?? Tamir Kalifa / New York Times ?? Pumps are used to keep a coal ash pit from flooding in the aftermath of Hurricane Florence in Conway, S.C., last year.
Tamir Kalifa / New York Times Pumps are used to keep a coal ash pit from flooding in the aftermath of Hurricane Florence in Conway, S.C., last year.

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