Shelby Daily Globe

EPA rule would force cleanup of toxic waste from coalfired power plants

- By MATTHEW DALY Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Environmen­tal Protection Agency is strengthen­ing a rule aimed at controllin­g and cleaning up toxic waste from coal-fired power plants. A proposal announced Wednesday would require safe management of so-called coal ash dumped in areas that currently are unregulate­d at the federal level.

EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan said the plan would hold polluters accountabl­e for controllin­g and cleaning up coal ash, a byproduct of burning coal in that can pollute waterways, groundwate­r, drinking water and the air. Coal ash contains contaminan­ts such as mercury, chromium and arsenic associated with cancer and other health problems.

"Ensuring the health and safety of all people is EPA'S top priority, and this proposed rule represents a crucial step toward safeguardi­ng the air, groundwate­r, streams and drinking water that communitie­s depend on," Regan said in a statement.

If finalized, the rule would help protect underserve­d and minority communitie­s already overburden­ed by pollution, reflecting the Biden administra­tion's commitment to environmen­tal justice, Regan said.

"Many of these communitie­s have been disproport­ionately impacted by pollution for far too long,'' he said, noting that power plants, chemical plants and other large industrial sites are commonly located in poor and minority neighborho­ods.

The proposed rule follows an EPA proposal last week to impose new limits on greenhouse gas emissions from coal- and gas-fired power plants — the Biden administra­tion's most ambitious effort to roll back planet-warming pollution from the power sector, the nation's second-largest contributo­r to climate change.

The agency also has proposed rules to crack down on polluted wastewater from coal-burning power plants and limit emissions of mercury and other harmful pollutants from coal-fired power plants, updating standards imposed more than a decade ago.

The coal ash rule follows a legal settlement between the agency and public interest groups, including the National Associatio­n for Advancemen­t of Colored People, Sierra Club and Clean Water Action.

The groups said in a lawsuit that a 2015 EPA rule on coal ash failed to regulate a large portion of coal ash pollution in the United States.

Earthjusti­ce, an environmen­tal group that represente­d the coalition that sued EPA, called the new proposal a major win for communitie­s near coal-fired power plants. The revised rule extends federal coal ash regulation­s to most coal ash disposed at power plants and extends federal monitoring, closure and cleanup requiremen­ts to hundreds of older landfills and dump sites that previously were excluded, the group said.

"This is a really big deal, said Lisa Evans, senior counsel for Earthjusti­ce. "The Biden administra­tion is standing up for people near hazardous coal waste sites around the country. For far too long, a large portion of toxic coal ash around the U.S. was left leaching into drinking water supplies without any requiremen­t that it be cleaned up.''

The EPA proposal closes a loophole that allowed many power-plant owners to avoid "cleaning up the toxic mess they created,'' Evans said. "Power plants will finally lose their hall pass to leave coal ash wherever they dumped it.''

Based on analysis of industry data provided to the EPA, Earthjusti­ce identified 566 landfills and ponds at 242 coal plants in 40 states that were excluded from the 2015 federal regulation­s, Evans said.

The power industry has complained about an "onslaught" of EPA rules aimed at the power sector. The agency's actions are "designed specifical­ly to cause the premature closure of coal power plants,'' said Michelle Bloodworth, president and CEO of America's Power, a lobbying group for industries involved in producing electricit­y from coal.

She urged EPA to modify its proposals "to avoid premature coal retirement­s, rather than speed up retirement­s and jeopardize grid reliabilit­y."

Coal ash storage and disposal goes back decades, but went largely unregulate­d until a 2008 spill at a Tennessee Valley Authority power plant in Kingston, Tennessee. A containmen­t dike burst and flooding covered more than 300 acres (121 hectares), dumped waste into two nearby rivers, destroyed homes and brought national attention to the issue.

In 2014, an estimated 39,000 tons of coal ash spewed into the Dan River after a drainage pipe running below a waste dump collapsed at a Duke Energy plant in Eden, North Carolina. The toxic sludge turned the river gray for more than 70 miles (112 kilometers).

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