Houston Chronicle

EPA plans to ease 2 rules targeting coal plant pollution

- By Ellen Knickmeyer and Travis Loller

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion accelerate­d the pace of its environmen­tal rollbacks for the country’s coal-fired power plants Monday, proposing to weaken two Obama-era rules aimed at cleaning up dangerous heavy metals and ash from coal plants in groundwate­r and waterways.

The new proposals, the latest in a series of regulatory breaks granted by the administra­tion for the sagging U.S. coal industry and for electric utilities using coal-fired plants, reduces “heavy burdens on electricit­y producers across the country,” EPA administra­tor Andrew Wheeler said in a statement.

One of the two proposals released by Wheeler on Monday would relax some 2015 requiremen­ts on coal-fired plants for cleaning coal ash and toxic heavy metals — including mercury, arsenic and selenium — from plant wastewater before dumping it into waterways.

The other would give some utilities up to several more years to clean up or close the 400-plus unlined coal ash dumps around the country that lie within a few feet of groundwate­r.

The rewrite serves to “insert a grab bag of loopholes into what had been a strong national set of health protection­s,” said Thomas Cmar, attorney for the coal program of the environmen­tal advocacy group Earthjusti­ce.

It’s “allowing the power industry to continue dumping toxic contaminan­ts in our waterways at the expense of public health,” Cmar said.

President Donald Trump has embraced a series of regulatory breaks and boosts sought by the coal and utility industries, including overturnin­g U.S. support of the Paris climate accord and scrapping a legacy Obama climate program aimed at pushing dirtierbur­ning coal plants out of the country’s electrical grid.

But coal production in the U.S. has continued falling amid a boom for natural gas and some renewable energy, and U.S. coal facilities are closing despite the proposed regulatory relief. Coal magnate Robert Murray, an influentia­l Trump donor and fundraiser who had presented the new administra­tion with a written “action plan” of desired breaks for the coal industry, sought bankruptcy protection for his Murray Energy last week.

The EPA says the relaxed wastewater rule will save $175 million annually in compliance costs. It contends that discharge of toxic contaminan­ts into rivers, streams, creeks and ponds would actually go down, owing to what it says will be increased, voluntary wastewater cleanups by utilities. Conservati­on advocates and EPA regulators from the time of President Barack Obama call that claim unproven and unlikely.

Other administra­tion coal proposals include easing restrictio­ns on smokestack releases of toxic mercury and on handling of coal plant waste ash.

The administra­tion plans a 60day period for public comment on the two rule rewrites.

 ?? Luke Sharrett / Bloomberg ?? The coal-burning Paradise Fossil Plant is in Paradise, Ky. The coal industry and utilities owning coal-fired plants have been hit hard as natural gas and solar and wind power get cheaper.
Luke Sharrett / Bloomberg The coal-burning Paradise Fossil Plant is in Paradise, Ky. The coal industry and utilities owning coal-fired plants have been hit hard as natural gas and solar and wind power get cheaper.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States