The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

EPA stance could change Georgia Power plan

At issue is how utility disposes of coal ash near state’s waterways.

- By Matt Kempner matthew.kempner@ajc.com Staff writer Drew Kann contribute­d to this article.

Environmen­tal Protection Agency efforts earlier this week to curtail the way some U.S. utilities are disposing of coal ash could hamper Georgia Power’s plans of dealing tens of millions of cubic yards of the material near the Chattahooc­hee River and elsewhere in the state.

Coal ash includes potentiall­y toxic leftovers from combustion at coal-burning generating plants. Such material often sits in on-site impoundmen­ts at electric plants around the nation.

Georgia Power has asked state regulators to let it leave its ash — without protective liners underneath — at plants near Smyrna, Rome, Newnan, Carrollton and Juliette. State regulators say the bottom of the ash at those plants sits in anywhere between a foot of groundwate­r to more than 50 feet. Environmen­tal groups and some neighbors worry about contaminat­ion migrating off site.

On Tuesday, the EPA said it was restating the federal agency’s “consistent­ly held position” that coal ash sites cannot be closed with the material in contact with groundwate­r. Limiting such contact “is critical to minimizing releases of contaminan­ts into the environmen­t and will help ensure communitie­s near these facilities have access to safe water for drinking and recreation.”

An EPA official this week also asked the Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division to review its

closure permits for coal ash sites to ensure they comply with the federal interpreta­tion of standards. Georgia is one of only three states that have received special authorizat­ion to issue coal ash closure permits that would typically be handled by the federal agency.

Kevin Chambers, a spokesman for the state EPD, wrote in an email that the state was informed of “the potential change to the performanc­e standards.”

“We are awaiting further clarificat­ions and discussion with our federal partners,” Chambers

said, and any impact on pending applicatio­ns ”is unknown at this time.”

A Georgia Power spokesman wrote in an email that the company is evaluating the EPA’S position. The Atlanta-based utility will “continue to work with them, as well as Georgia EPD, to safely close our ash ponds.”

The company’s proposed $9 billion cleanup plan, which will likely be paid by its customers, includes removing some ash to lined landfills. But Georgia Power has asked to leave three-fourths

of the ash in updated sites beside current or former plants. They would have protective covering and surroundin­g monitoring wells to track any potential contaminat­ion. Most would not have a synthetic liner underneath, which are typical protection­s required at regular landfills.

The state regulators have taken heat from environmen­tal groups and people who live in communitie­s around the plants. Some complained about an early draft permit issued by the Georgia EPD that, if finalized, would allow

more than a million cubic yards of coal ash — enough to fill 5,400 tractor trailers — to sit forever in an unlined site along the Coosa River near Rome.

Frank Holleman, a senior attorney with the Southern Environmen­tal Law Center, said he thinks state regulators will not try to buck their federal counterpar­ts “now that the EPA has made it clear to them, which should have been obvious in the first place.”

 ?? DANIEL VARNADO/FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Georgia Power’s Plant Mcdonough in Smyrna is one of the electric utility’s operations that could be affected by the federal Environmen­tal Protection­s Agency’s efforts to curtail how such power plants plan to dispose of coal ash.
DANIEL VARNADO/FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Georgia Power’s Plant Mcdonough in Smyrna is one of the electric utility’s operations that could be affected by the federal Environmen­tal Protection­s Agency’s efforts to curtail how such power plants plan to dispose of coal ash.

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