Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump plan could prolong lives of coal plants — and their smog

- By Jennifer A. Dlouhy

WASHINGTON — Tucked inside the Trump administra­tion’s plan to ease carbon dioxide limits is a change that could breathe new life into scores of aging coal power plants.

Experts say the shift could also unleash an additional tens of thousands of tons nitrogen oxide emissions into the air each year.

The proposal would permit upgrades to old power plants without triggering an existing legal requiremen­t to install costly pollution control systems at the same time. The upgrades could extend the lives of those plants by making them more reliable or cheaper to run.

For coal power plant owners, “this proposal seems to want to let them have their cake and eat it too: to improve their efficiency, run more often and not trigger” the requiremen­ts, said Andres Restrepo, a staff attorney with the Sierra Club.

More than a third of American coal-fired units lack modern controls to pare smog-forming nitrogen oxide emissions, according to a Bloomberg News review of Environmen­tal Protection Agency data.

Some of those plants went into operation in the 1950s and 1960s, predating advanced catalytic-reduction equipment and regulatory requiremen­ts compelling its use.

All told, at least 33 percent of electricit­y generated by burning coal last year was not subjected to advanced pollution controls, according EPA data.

For years, owners of those aging facilities have faced a major challenge: The plants might benefit from equipment replacemen­ts and upgrades that would make them more reliable and less costly to run — and better able to compete with natural gas-fired units. Yet any change that would bolster nitrogen oxide emissions by 40 tons a year — perhaps just because the plants would run more as a result of the upgrades — would also trigger requiremen­ts to install modern controls to keep those pollutants at bay.

President Donald Trump’s EPA is offering a revision as part of its proposal to replace an Obama administra­tion regulation slashing carbon dioxide emissions across the nation’s electric grid with modest requiremen­ts for efficiency upgrades at individual power plants.

At issue is the federal government’s so-called New Source Review program, which allows power plants, refineries, factories and other industrial facilities to keep running with existing pollution-control equipment — even if it has become outdated — so the systems don’t constantly need upgrades.

Under the New Source Review program, requiremen­ts for better pollution-control systems are triggered whenever the sites undergo constructi­on, renovation­s or some operationa­l changes expected to significan­tly boost annual emissions.

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