The Bakersfield Californian

Southern California enacts new smog rules on refineries

- BY ROBERT JABLON

DIAMOND BAR — Southern California air regulators on Friday approved new restrictio­ns on area oil refineries and other factories that could remove tons of smog-forming pollutants from the air.

The board of the South Coast Air Quality Management District adopted rule changes requiring emissions limits on oxides of nitrogen that will affect nine refineries and seven plants that produce asphalt, biofuel plants, hydrogen and sulfuric acid.

Oxides of nitrogen, collective­ly known as NOx, form when fuel is burned at high temperatur­es. The gases can be produced by cars and industrial sources such as refineries and power plants. They are a key ingredient in producing ozone pollution.

The new rules will reduce NOx emissions by around 8 tons per day over the next 14 years, with nearly half of the reductions expected by 2023 and will go a long way to helping the region meet some federal air quality standards by 2031, the AQMD said.

“Once implemente­d, this rule will have immediate benefits to our air quality, especially for those living near these facilities who are directly impacted,” AQMD board Chair Ben J. Benoit said in the statement. “We estimate the public health benefits achieved through this rule will help avoid 370 premature deaths and more than 6,200 asthma attacks.”

The rules apply to some 300 pieces of combustion equipment at the facilities such as boilers and gas turbines. The rules, which will be implemente­d over a decade, provide two ways of meeting the new requiremen­ts and also ban refineries from purchasing credits to offset pollution they produce.

The total cost of implementi­ng the new rules is projected at about $2.3 billion but the reduction in health costs from pollution is expected to be about $2.6 billion, according to a September AQMD study session.

The Western States Petroleum Associatio­n, representi­ng oil companies, called it “a strong rule.”

“The industry is committed to ensuring the rule is successful by making substantia­l investment­s to reduce emissions,” Patty Senecal, director for the associatio­n’s Southern California region, told the Daily Breeze.

The vote also was applauded by environmen­tal groups.

“These reductions are crucially important; Southern California suffers from some of the dirtiest air in the nation and fails to meet state and national air quality standards,” said a statement from the Coalition for Clean Air.

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