Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Pa. environmen­tal board slams Sunoco air-quality permit

- By Bill Rettew brettew@21st-centurymed­ia.com

which run across Pennsylvan­ia. The decision came in response to Clean Air Council’s appeal in April 2016, leading to a trial in May 2018.

Specifical­ly, the board said that DEP was mistaken when it considered various portions of the plan as separate entities. Instead the board noted DEP should have reviewed the project as a whole.

Alex Bomstein, senior litigation attorney for Clean Air Council, hailed the ruling.

“The board’s ruling really shows that no one – not even Sunoco – is above the law,” Bomstein said. “The industry’s practice of dividing up big projects into smaller pieces that sneak under pollution thresholds, what we call segmentati­on, has gone on for too long. This decision is a major step towards restoring the protection­s that help ensure we have clean air to breathe.”

Sunoco/ETP spokeswoma­n Lisa Dillinger took a different view of the ruling Thursday.

“Today’s ruling has no impact on the constructi­on and operation activities authorized under Plan Approval E while the PA DEP conducts an analysis of the permit, which we feel was permitted correctly,” Dillinger said. “We will work with the PA DEP to provide them with the appropriat­e informatio­n for their review, and we are pleased that the overriding outcome was the Environmen­tal Hearing Board’s denial of the Clean Air Council’s request to revoke the permit.”

The board held that the project in question was really part of an overarchin­g project to transform the former Marcus Hook refinery into a natural gas liquids processing facility. The larger project was unlawfully broken up into smaller projects for the sake of permitting. Where separate constructi­on activities are really all part of the same project, the emissions from all of those projects must be aggregated to determine if more stringent requiremen­ts are triggered. Ultimately, the board sent the air permit back to DEP so that DEP can re-evaluate how the project should be permitted.

The board’s decision enhances existing law by providing detailed guidance on when multiple related projects should be considered one project in a review of an air permit applicatio­n.

“The Environmen­tal Hearing Board’s decision is not only a victory for Clean Air Council, it is a victory for public health and the neighborin­g communitie­s,” said Joseph Otis Minott, executive director and chief counsel for Clean Air Council. “Too often, big industry players have avoided pollution controls by creating loopholes that jeopardize air quality protection­s. Sunoco/ETP has been one of the worst offenders in this regard, time and again circumvent­ing the rules and putting the public at risk. The board decision has finally closed this loophole.”

Mariner East 2 is a multibilli­on dollar project that will carry liquid gases from the state’s Marcellus Shale regions across the full 350mile width of Pennsylvan­ia, ending in Marcus Hook. Mariner East 2 is now online, utilizing a mix of different size pipes because of delays and shutdowns on the full, 20-inch pipeline.

The board’s opinion is available in full at: http://ehb.courtapps.com/ efile/documentVi­ewer.

php?documentID=44482.

 ?? DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA FILE PHOTO ?? The Sunoco refinery in Marcus Hook.
DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA FILE PHOTO The Sunoco refinery in Marcus Hook.

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