The Denver Post

Coal plant pollution rollback finalized

- By Matthew Brown and Travis Loller

BILLINGS, MONT. » The Trump administra­tion on Monday finalized its weakening of an Obama- era rule aimed at reducing polluted wastewater from coal- burning power plants that has contaminat­ed streams, lakes and undergroun­d aquifers.

The change will allow utilities to use cheaper technologi­es and take longer to comply with pollution reduction guidelines that are less stringent than what the agency originally adopted in 2015.

It’s the latest in a string of regulatory rollbacks for coal power under Trump — actions that have failed to turn around the industry’s decline amid competitio­n from cheap natural gas and renewable energy.

The latest rule change covers requiremen­ts for cleaning coal ash and toxic heavy metals such as mercury, arsenic and selenium from plant wastewater before it is dumped into waterways.

Utilities are expected to save $ 140 million annually under the changes, which Environmen­tal Protection Agency Administra­tor Andrew Wheeler said in a statement would protect industry jobs in part by using a phased- in approach to reducing pollution.

But environmen­talists and former EPA officials warned the move will harm public health and result in hundreds of thousands of pounds of pollutants annually contaminat­ing water bodies.

The new rule largely exempts coal plants that will retire or switch to burning natural gas by 2028.

Coal plants are responsibl­e for as much as 30% of all toxic water pollution from all industries in the U. S. In the Southeast, that number is even higher.

“This rule is going to continue to let these coal- fired power plants pour these toxics into the nation’s rivers and streams, contaminat­ing drinking water and fisheries for 2.7 million people,” said Betsy Southerlan­d, who was the science director in the EPA’s water office before retiring in 2017.

The estimate of people impacted is from the analysis that was done for the Obama- era rule, she said.

The revised rule is expected to affect 75 out of 914 coal power plants nationwide, compared to more than 100 plants affected by the 2015 rule. That’s in part because coal power usage has dropped dramatical­ly over the past decade and many plants have been shuttered.

The rules also carve out an exception for a plant operated by the nation’s largest public utility, the Tennessee Valley Authority. The plant in Cumberland City, Tenn., accounts for up to one- sixth of the wastewater released in the country from cleaning out coal plant flues, millions of gallons per day more than any other plant.

In 2015, the EPA rejected an exception for the plant after determinin­g the benefits to human health and the environmen­t outweighed the costs of compliance. Under Trump, the agency reversed course and removed limits on the amount of selenium and nitrate the plant can discharge into the Cumberland River.

Power plants that are not exempted must comply by 2025, or by 2028 if they take some additional, voluntary pollution control measures. The 2015 rule would have required compliance between 2018 and 2023.

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