The Columbus Dispatch

EPA to crack down on coal ash ponds

Plants in three states to shutter ahead of schedule

- Matthew Daly ASSOCIATED PRESS AP FILE

WASHINGTON – The Environmen­tal Protection Agency is taking its first major action to address toxic wastewater from coal-burning power plants, denying requests by three Midwest power plants to extend operations of leaking or otherwise dangerous coal ash storage ponds.

Plants in Indiana, Ohio and Iowa will have to close the coal ash ponds months or years ahead of schedule, the EPA said Tuesday, citing deficienci­es with groundwate­r monitoring or cleanup.

Coal ash, the substance that remains when coal is burned to generate electricit­y, contains a toxic mix of mercury, cadmium, arsenic and other heavy metals. It can pollute waterways, poison wildlife and cause respirator­y illness among those living near massive ponds where the waste is stored.

A fourth industrial site, at a former coalpower plant in New York State that now burns natural gas, is ineligible for an extension and also will be forced to close early, the EPA said. A separate coal-powered plant in Kentucky will be required to fix groundwate­r monitoring as a condition for continued operation of its coal ash pond, the agency said.

The actions mark the first time the EPA has enforced a 2015 rule aimed at reducing groundwate­r pollution from coal-fired power plants that has contaminat­ed streams, lakes and undergroun­d aquifers.

U.S. coal plants produce about 100 million tons annually of ash and other waste.

The Obama administra­tion regulated the storage and disposal of toxic coal ash for the first time, including a requiremen­t to close coal-ash dumping ponds that were unstable or contaminat­ed groundwate­r. The Trump administra­tion weakened the Obama-era rule in 2020, allowing utilities to use cheaper technologi­es and take longer to comply with pollution reduction guidelines that are less stringent than what the agency originally adopted.

EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan said the actions announced Tuesday will ensure that coal ash ponds meet strong environmen­tal and safety standards and that operators of industrial facilities are held accountabl­e.

“I’ve seen firsthand how coal ash contaminat­ion can hurt people and communitie­s,” said Regan, a former North Carolina environmen­tal regulator who negotiated with Duke Energy what state officials say was the largest cleanup agreement for toxic coal ash.

“For too long, communitie­s already disproport­ionately impacted by high levels of pollution have been burdened by improper coal ash disposal,” Regan said. “Today’s actions will help us protect communitie­s and hold facilities accountabl­e. We look forward to working with our state partners to reverse damage that has already occurred.”

In separate letters sent Tuesday, EPA denied requests for extensions of coal ash permits by the Clifty Creek power plant in Madison, Indiana; James M. Gavin plant in Cheshire, Ohio; and the Ottumwa plant in Ottumwa, Iowa.

The Greenidge Generation plant in

Dresden, New York, was ruled ineligible for an extension. The former coal plant now uses natural gas.

Conditiona­l approval was granted to the H.L. Spurlock plant in Maysville, Kentucky.

Lisa Evans, a senior attorney for the environmen­tal group Earthjusti­ce, said the enforcemen­t action “sends a strong message to industry that (compliance with the EPA rule) is not a paperwork exercise. It requires them to clean up these toxic sites.”

Data released by utilities in 2018 showed widespread evidence of contaminat­ion at coal plants from Virginia to Alaska.

 ?? ?? Environmen­tal Protection Agency Administra­tor Michael Regan speaks Dec. 20. The EPA is denying requests by three Midwest power plants to extend operations of dangerous coal ash storage ponds.
Environmen­tal Protection Agency Administra­tor Michael Regan speaks Dec. 20. The EPA is denying requests by three Midwest power plants to extend operations of dangerous coal ash storage ponds.

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