The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Progress in metro areas

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Protection Agency deal with fine particulat­e matter, otherwise known as soot, which comes from power plants, oil refineries, diesel trucks and buses.

Soot can settle deep into the lungs and the circulator­y system, according to the American Lung Associatio­n. Public health and environmen­tal advocates say soot is among the deadliest contaminan­ts released into the air.

“Today’s announceme­nt by President (Barack) Obama and EPA will mean less deadly pollution in our air, and that should make all Georgians breathe a little easier,” Jennette Gayer of Environmen­t Georgia said in a statement.

But Steve Higginbott­om, a spokesman for the Atlanta-based Southern Co., called the regulation “overreachi­ng” and said it “will hurt economic growth by jeopardizi­ng jobs and burdening hardworkin­g American families with increased energy costs.”

Compliance costs

Southern Co. could not put a price on how much compliance with the soot regulation would cost, but it says to comply with other requiremen­ts to curb mercury, sulfur dioxides and nitrogen oxides could cost it and its utilities, including Georgia Power, $13 billion to $18 billion through 2020.

EPA estimated the reduced soot will save the nation’s health care system $4 billion to $9 billion per year by reducing a range of ailments from heart attacks to childhood asthma. By contrast, the agency said companies would pay in all between $53 million and $350 million per year to comply with the new standards.

Scott Segal, a Washington-based lobbyist for a group of utility companies that includes Southern, scoffed at the compliance estimate. “It’s not a good day for American consumers, for job creation and for economic recovery, all at very little additional environmen­tal or public health benefit,” Segal said.

The Clean Air Act requires the EPA to revise standards for soot every five years. Friday was the agency’s court-ordered deadline to finalize the updated rule, which had not been changed since 1997. The agency establishe­d a maximum annual average of 12 micrograms of soot per cubic meter, a 20 percent decrease from the former standard of 15 micrograms.

Progress has been made in the four Georgia metro areas that were deemed out of compliance under the former standard in 2005. State environmen­tal officials have asked the EPA for another review of those areas, where soot problems are caused by a combinatio­n of high traffic and emissions from coal-powered utility plants. Those requests are pending.

EPA to review data

The state, including those four metro areas, will come under review again under the new standard. The state is allowed one year to submit air quality data, and the EPA has at least two years to review it. Then states have until 2018 to submit their plans to meet the new standards and until 2020 to comply.

Jac Capp, chief of the Environmen­tal Protection Division’s Air Protection branch, said those four metro areas are above the EPA’s new standard released Friday. That could change by 2015.

“There’s a chance for the levels (of pollutants) to go down,” Capp said. “They are trending down.”

In the mid- to late 1990s, when metro At- lanta struggled to meet air quality standards that mostly related to ozone, the region was ineligible to participat­ed in some federally funded transporta­tion projects.

This is no longer the case, Capp said, as the region is growing more slowly and automobile­s have become cleaner.

The rule comes one month before Georgia Power releases its highly anticipate­d long-term energy plan. The bulky document will contain the utility’s plan for getting electricit­y for the next 20 years and include proposals for complying with the EPA’s rules. That could include closing coal-fired units, changing them to run on natural gas or adding pollution controls.

Southern’s utilities, in- cluding Georgia Power, gradually have reduced the amount of electricit­y they get from coal from 70 percent five years ago to 47 percent now. Still, three of Southern’s coalfired plants top the list of the nation’s largest contributo­rs to global greenhouse gases, according to EPA data from 2010.

And a report from the Union of Concerned Sci- entists identified the utility as having the largest number of coal plants that should be closed instead of retrofitte­d with pollution controls because it’s too expensive to do so. This is partly because some of Southern’s coal units are so old.

Southern has spent millions of dollars in Washington to stave off some of the EPA’s stricter re- quirements and has had some success. For example, the federal rule designed to cut downwind pollution by reducing the amount of nitrogen oxides and sulfur oxides coming from power plants was overturned by a federal appeals court.

This allows utilities to continue to operate coalfired plants without adding pollution controls.

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