Los Angeles Times

EPA pitches new rules for coal and gas plants

Plan to limit emissions is expected to draw industry’s opposition.

- By Matthew Daly Daly writes for the Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — The Biden administra­tion proposed new limits Thursday on greenhouse gas emissions from coal- and gasfired power plants, its most ambitious effort yet to roll back planet-warming pollution from the nation’s second-largest contributo­r to climate change.

A rule announced by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency could force power plants to capture smokestack emissions with a technology that has long been promised but is not used widely in the United States.

“This administra­tion is committed to meeting the urgency of the climate crisis and taking the necessary actions required,” EPA Administra­tor Michael S. Regan said.

The plan would not only “improve air quality nationwide, but it will bring substantia­l health benefits to communitie­s all across the country,” Regan said in a speech at the University of Maryland.

President Biden called the plan “a major step forward in the climate crisis and protecting public health.”

If finalized, the regulation would mark the first time the federal government has restricted carbon dioxide emissions from existing power plants, which generate about 25% of U.S. greenhouse gas pollution, second only to the transporta­tion sector.

The rule also would apply to future electric plants and would avoid up to 617 million metric tons of carbon dioxide through 2042, equivalent to annual emissions of 137 million passenger vehicles, the EPA said.

Almost all coal plants — along with large, frequently used gas-fired power plants — would have to cut or capture nearly all their carbon dioxide emissions by 2038, the EPA said. Plants that cannot meet the new standards would be forced to retire.

Industry groups and Republican-leaning states are likely to challenge the plan. They have accused the Democratic administra­tion of overreach on environmen­tal regulation­s and warn of a pending reliabilit­y crisis for the electric grid. The power plant rule is one of at least a half-dozen EPA rules limiting power plant emissions and wastewater treatment.

“It’s truly an onslaught” of government regulation “designed to shut down the coal fleet prematurel­y,” said Rich Nolan, president and chief executive of the National Mining Assn.

Regan denied that the power plant rule was aimed at shutting down the coal sector but acknowledg­ed, “We will see some coal retirement­s.”

The proposal “relies on proven, readily available technologi­es to limit carbon pollution” and builds on industry practices already underway to move toward clean energy, he said.

Coal provides about 20% of U.S. electricit­y, down from about 45% in 2010. Natural gas provides about 40% of U.S. electricit­y. The remainder comes from nuclear energy and renewables such as wind, solar and hydropower.

Environmen­tal groups hailed the EPA’s action as urgently needed to protect against devastatin­g harms of climate change, including increasing­ly severe flooding, hurricanes and drought, and worsening wildfires.

Fred Krupp, president of the Environmen­tal Defense Fund, said the proposal “will bring us closer to a clean energy future with healthier air, a safer climate, good jobs and affordable, reliable electricit­y.”

Jim Matheson, CEO of the National Rural Electric Cooperativ­e Assn., said the plan would further strain America’s electric grid and “undermine decades of work to reliably keep the lights on across the nation.”

Matheson, whose associatio­n represents 900 local electric cooperativ­es across the country, said EPA’s plan could “force critical, alwaysavai­lable power plants into early retirement, and make new natural gas plants exceedingl­y difficult to permit, site and build.”

The EPA rule would not mandate use of equipment to capture and store carbon emissions — a technology being developed. Instead, the agency would set caps on carbon dioxide pollution that plant operators would have to meet. Some natural gas plants could start blending gas with another fuel source such as hydrogen, which does not emit carbon, although specific actions would be left to the industry.

Still, the regulation is expected to lead to greater use of carbon capture equipment, a technology that the EPA said has been “adequately demonstrat­ed” to control pollution. Only a handful of projects are operating in the country despite years of research.

Jessie Stolark, executive director the Carbon Capture Coalition, said the proposed rules “elevate the role of carbon capture by naming it as one of the available technologi­es for reaching emissions standards.” Even with aggressive growth of renewables over the next decade, fossil fuels, especially natural gas, “will be in the domestic energy mix for decades,” said Stolark, whose coalition includes industry, labor and environmen­tal groups.

Groups on both ends of the political spectrum questioned whether carbon capture and storage is a realistic solution.

“Billions of dollars have been wasted trying to prove that this technology is real — and all we have to show for it are a series of spectacula­r failures,” said Wenonah Hauter, executive director of Food & Water Watch, a leftleanin­g advocacy group.

Marty Durbin, president of the U.S. Chamber’s Global Energy Institute, said EPA regulation­s “must be grounded in what is technologi­cally feasible and commercial­ly available. Going beyond that, as this regulation does, could threaten electric reliabilit­y and raise energy prices to unsustaina­ble levels.”

About 60% of the electricit­y generated in the nation last year came from the nation’s 3,400 coal- and gasfired plants, according to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion.

“We need to do this to meet the climate crisis,” said David Doniger, senior strategic director for climate and clean energy at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

The power plant rules are crucial to meeting Biden’s goals to cut greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030 and eliminate carbon emissions from the power grid by 2035, he and other advocates said.

 ?? Nathan Howard Associated Press ?? EPA CHIEF Michael S. Regan discusses the agency’s plans at the University of Maryland in College Park.
Nathan Howard Associated Press EPA CHIEF Michael S. Regan discusses the agency’s plans at the University of Maryland in College Park.

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