The Columbus Dispatch

EPA moves to restore rule on mercury from power plants

- Drew Costley

WASHINGTON – The Environmen­tal Protection Agency on Friday reaffirmed the basis for a rule that requires “significan­t reductions” in mercury and other harmful pollutants from power plants, reversing a move late in former President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to roll back emissions standards.

The EPA said it found it “appropriat­e and necessary” to regulate emissions of toxic air pollution under the Clean Air Act, setting the stage to restore protection­s enacted when President Barack Obama’s EPA issued the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards.

“For years, Mercury and Air Toxics Standards have protected the health of American communitie­s nationwide, especially children, low-income communitie­s, and communitie­s of color who often and unjustly live near power plants,” EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan said in a statement. “This finding ensures the continuati­on of these critical, life-saving protection­s while advancing President Biden’s commitment to making science-based decisions and protecting the health and wellbeing of all people and all communitie­s.”

The move is in line with a larger push by the EPA under President Joe Biden to restore the numerous federal environmen­tal protection­s that were rolled back by Trump’s administra­tion, like reinstatin­g rigorous environmen­tal reviews for large infrastruc­ture projects, protecting thousands of waterways and preserving endangered species.

Coal-fired power plants are the largest single manmade source of mercury pollutants, which enter the food chain through fish and other items that people consume. Mercury can affect the nervous system and kidneys; the World Health Organizati­on says fetuses are especially vulnerable to birth defects via exposure in a parent’s womb.

“The concern largely is the brain developmen­t of young children ... and also (it) has effects on adults that contribute­s to heart attacks. It’s a highly toxic substance,” said Charles T. Driscoll, an environmen­tal scientist at Syracuse University who studies mercury pollution.

Public health profession­als and environmen­talists praised the restoratio­n of the Obama-era rule, saying it protects Americans, especially children, from some of the most dangerous forms of air pollution. But many also said the administra­tion could go further by requiring even greater reductions in toxic air pollution from power plants.

“Retaining these protection­s is a critical first step; we now urge EPA to strengthen them. We need stronger standards to protect all communitie­s from these pollutants, especially those living near power plants,” said Georges C. Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Associatio­n.

Michael Panfil, an attorney for the Environmen­tal Defense Fund, also urged the Biden administra­tion to strengthen the protection­s, but said the restoratio­n of the rule “should be a relief to all Americans.”

Most coal-fired power plants have already made upgrades to their facilities required when the regulation first went into effect in 2012. The Edison Electric Institute, a lobbying group that represents investor-owned electric companies, thanked the EPA for restoring the rule.

 ?? RICK BOWMER/AP FILE ?? The Environmen­tal Protection Agency on Friday reaffirmed the basis for a rule that requires “significan­t reductions” in mercury and other harmful pollutants from power plants.
RICK BOWMER/AP FILE The Environmen­tal Protection Agency on Friday reaffirmed the basis for a rule that requires “significan­t reductions” in mercury and other harmful pollutants from power plants.

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