The Mercury News

EPA moves to undo tougher pollution limits on coal plants

Energy companies get letter announcing rewriting of rules

- By Michael Biesecker

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion is moving to rewrite Obamaera rules limiting water pollution from coal-fired power plants.

Scott Pruitt, the administra­tor of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, sent a letter announcing his decision to a coalition of energy companies that lobbied against the 2015 water pollution regulation­s.

The rule would have required utilities by next year to cut the amounts of toxic heavy metals in the wastewater piped from their plants into rivers and lakes often used as sources of drinking water. Arsenic, lead and mercury and other potentiall­y harmful contaminat­es leach from massive pits of waterlogge­d ash left behind after burning coal to generate electricit­y.

The Utility Water Act Group petitioned Pruitt last month to reverse course on the regulation­s, which they claim would result in plant closures and job losses.

Pruitt responded Wednesday, saying he would delay compliance with the rule while EPA reconsider­s the restrictio­ns. EPA will also request that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit freeze ongoing lawsuits filed over the rules by energy companies.

The move is part of a broad effort by the Trump administra­tion to scrap stricter environmen­tal regulation­s enacted over the last eight years, especially those intended to curtail the use of fossil fuels. Trump has pledged to reverse decades of decline in coal-mining jobs and has questioned the consensus of climate scientists that man-made carbon emissions are to blame for global warming.

Environmen­tal groups vowed to oppose the regulatory rollback, calling it short-sighted.

“Scott Pruitt is continuing his scorched-earth crusade to sweep aside anything that gets in the way of fossil-fuel industry profits,” said Pete Harrison, a lawyer with the advocacy group Waterkeepe­r Alliance. “This rollback gives a blank check to the power companies, and it directly threatens drinking water supplies across the country.”

 ?? GERRY BROOME/ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVE ?? This drainage pipe at the Dan River Steam Station in Eden, North Carolina, is the original culprit of a coal ash spill.
GERRY BROOME/ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVE This drainage pipe at the Dan River Steam Station in Eden, North Carolina, is the original culprit of a coal ash spill.

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