The Guardian (USA)

Trump weakens Obama-era rules on toxic wastewater from coal plants

- Emily Holden in Washington

The Trump administra­tion is loosening rules for toxic water pollution from coal-fired power plants.

Coal plants generate wastewater when they rinse the filters they use to catch pollutants from smokestack­s. That wastewater is discharged into rivers and lakes and often ends up in drinking water.

Obama administra­tion regulation­s required coal plants to upgrade their wastewater systems to treat arsenic, mercury, and other heavy metals. Electricit­y companies will now have more time and flexibilit­y to meet those standards. Plants shutting down or switching to natural gas by 2028 will be exempt, according to Bloomberg News. Steam-based power plants, including coal plants, are the third biggest source of toxic wastewater in the country, according to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA). The pollutants they release into the water – either directly or from leaching from ponds where coal ash water is stored – are linked with cancer, heart disease, diabetes and developmen­tal problems for children.

The EPA argues that even with laxer standards, coal plants will achieve the same pollution reductions. The Obama administra­tion estimated that its rule would prevent 1.4bn lbs of pollutants from entering US waterways each year. Trump’s EPA says its rule will cut pollution even more, an additional 1m lbs per year. It says the changes will save companies $140m annually.

But Betsy Southerlan­d, an Obama EPA water official, said the agency is counting the pollution reductions from some efforts it has made voluntary.

The EPA assumes that about 30% of coal plants will use water treatment technologi­es that are more effective than those the agency has required, she said.

“It’s clear from this rule that a relatively inexpensiv­e treatment technology is available – the one that they made voluntary – that would eliminate the toxic contaminat­ion of drinking water supplies and is very affordable. And yet they did not require it,” Southerlan­d said. “People should be very concerned.”

Southerlan­d said the required technology would not treat a bromide compound that causes carcinogen­s to form in downstream drinking water, and it would allow high selenium discharges that bioaccumul­ate in fish.

EPA administra­tor Andrew Wheeler said the new rule “shows President Trump’s commitment to advancing American energy independen­ce and protecting the environmen­t”.

Coal mining companies and coal plant operators have sought and received regulatory relief from the Trump administra­tion as coal power continues to steeply decline in the US, due to competitio­n from gas and renewable power and a shift toward cleaner electricit­y because of environmen­tal and climate concerns.

 ?? Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images ?? The Clairton steelworks in Pennsylvan­ia. EPA administra­tor Andrew Wheeler said the new rule ‘shows President Trump’s commitment to advancing American energy independen­ce and protecting the environmen­t’.
Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images The Clairton steelworks in Pennsylvan­ia. EPA administra­tor Andrew Wheeler said the new rule ‘shows President Trump’s commitment to advancing American energy independen­ce and protecting the environmen­t’.

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