The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

State to Sterigenic­s: Do more tests

Regulators want new emissions controls thoroughly tested for facility to get new permit, letter shows.

- By Meris Lutz mlutz@ajc.com strubey@ajc.com

Georgia regulators want a controvers­ial Cobb County medical sterilizer to conduct thorough testing of its new emissions controls before the state will grant a new permit allowing it to operate, according to a letter obtained Thursday by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

The letter to Sterigenic­s represents stepped-up enforcemen­t by the Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division as it seeks to curb emissions of ethylene oxide, a toxic gas that is used to decontamin­ate medical equipment. A federal report that raised

potential health concerns about ethylene oxide emissions set off an uproar in nearby neighborho­ods and has led to stricter state and local regulation of the plant near Smyrna.

Typically, Georgia EPD issues operating permits to emitters, which then have 60 days to perform emissions control testing. That testing data is then used as the basis for emissions standards in the company’s permit.

Here, state regulators are requiring Sterigenic­s to first prove the effectiven­ess of its new systems.

“This is to determine if the control devices are as efficient as they say they’ll be,” said Eric Cornwell, a permitting manager at Georgia EPD.

The EPD letter, which is dated Oct. 9, seeks Sterigenic­s’ testing plans, which the state must approve. Regulators also are requiring performanc­e testing of sterilizat­ion chambers, back vents and aeration rooms. It also seeks verificati­on of the efficiency of new systems to capture “fugitive emissions,” or those that previously were not captured

by the plant.

“The additional enhancemen­ts to our control systems are nearly completed, and Sterigenic­s agrees with EPD that the next step in the process is to demonstrat­e the effectiven­ess of the enhancemen­ts, the purpose of which is to further reduce ethylene oxide emissions below already safe levels,” Sterigenic­s said in a statement to the AJC.

In July, media reports about the federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s National Air Toxics Assessment triggered a firestorm of controvers­y involving the Sterigenic­s facility and the Becton Dickinson plant in Covington east of Atlanta.

The report flagged census tracts near the plants as having the potential for high rates of cancer from longterm exposure to ethylene oxide. The report was based on mathematic­al modeling, not air tests. Subsequent modeling by Georgia EPD significan­tly narrowed the zones of potentiall­y harmful long-term exposure.

Both facilities have since committed to installing millions of dollars in new emissions controls.

In August, Sterigenic­s entered into a consent order with Georgia EPD. Sterigenic­s suspended operations at the Cobb plant later that month in order to install the new equipment it said would reduce emissions of the flammable, carcinogen­ic gas.

But the company came under fire from Gov. Brian Kemp’s office when it announced it was expediting constructi­on without giving the state a chance to assess its proposal. Sterigenic­s has not completed the upgrades because the company is battling Cobb County over its building permit. The county has moved to reclassify the building from storage to high hazard industrial, but Sterigenic­s argued in a letter sent Oct. 10 to Cobb officials that it has the proper high hazard industrial zoning.

The EPD letter said regulators expect the company to complete and submit its tests and engineerin­g analysis to the state in 30 days, pending any required approvals of building permits by Cobb officials.

Janet Rau said the group she leads, called Stop Sterigenic­s Georgia, hired an expert who evaluated Sterigenic­s’ prior emissions tests and expressed concerns about reliabilit­y to Georgia EPD.

She said it appears those concerns about Sterigenic­s’ past tests have been incorporat­ed into the state’s evaluation of Sterigenic­s’ new permit.

“We’re glad they read that and are acting on it,” Rau said. “The only concern we have right now is that it appears they’re letting Sterigenic­s choose the company that’s doing this evaluation.”

The state typically lets a regulated company hire a third party to test emissions controls. Those tests are vetted by Georgia EPD regulators.

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