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Bush guts pollution controls on energy industry
By Joseph Kay
30 August 2003
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The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued a new rule
on Wednesday that will undermine a crucial component of the Clean
Air Act, the main piece of legislation governing air pollution.
The rule is the latest in a series of modifications of the New
Source Review (NSR) amendment to the act, which regulates coal-burning
power plants.
As significant as the content of the new rule is its timing.
It comes less than two weeks after the worst blackout in US history,
a social disaster that had its roots in the decay of the electrical
transmission grid. Many of the same power companies responsible
for this decay will benefit substantially from the gutting of
environmental standards at the hands of the Bush administration.
The Clean Air Act was enacted in the early 1970s, a response
to the growing problem of air pollution. The measure was pushed
in particular by businesses and politicians from urban centers,
especially in the East, where air pollution can be a major problem.
In 1977, as an amendment to the Clean Air Act, Congress passed
legislation necessitating NSR, which mandated that new coal plantswhich
now account for more than half of electricity production in the
countrymust have better pollution control. These plants
are located primarily in the Midwest and South.
As a concession to utility companies, plants constructed before
1970 were exempt from this requirement unless: (1) They made major
renovations; and (2) This was done in a way that significantly
increased emissions of certain key pollutants, including
nitrogen oxide, sulfur dioxide and mercury. The concession
was designed to reduce pollution through a process of attrition:
old plants would eventually be forced either to install modern
equipment or else shut down.
The new rule involves the first of these requirements for triggering
NSR. Explicitly excluded from the category of major renovations
was routine maintenance. The new rule essentially
allows companies that own power plants to include almost anything
under the category of routine maintenance. It stipulates that
any work on a process unita self-contained production
facility, more than one of which may exist at any given plantwill
automatically be excluded from NSR if the cost of the work does
not exceed 20 percent of the replacement value of the entire process
unit. This work must not change the basic design of the
unit.
Thus a company can make changes to extend the life of a coal-burning
plant and be exempt from NSR, even if the changes increase pollution
output at the plant. There are no stipulations on the time between
renovations, so a company could conceivably replace the entire
plant so long as these replacements are broken up into a sufficient
number of pieces. The essential purpose of NSRto force plants
to eventually install pollution-control measuresis thus
undermined completely.
New York attorney general Eliot Spitzerwho plans on filing
a lawsuit to halt the changes from being implementednoted,
A rule that creates a 20 percent threshold eviscerates the
statute. This makes it patently clear that the Bush administration
has meant all along to repeal the Clean Air Act by administrative
fiat.
A protracted drive to undermine pollution controls
The administrations decision is the culmination of an
intensive effort to undercut NSR, part of a drive to eliminate
all constraints and regulations of the energy industry.
For decades after its enactment, NSR was rarely enforced. As
a result, many power companies made major changes in their coal
plants without upgrading pollution standards. While those supporting
NSR in the 1970s had assumed that the old plants would eventually
whither away over the course of the next two decades, this did
not happen. In the latter years of the Clinton administration,
the EPA and the Justice Department moved to enforce NSR more strictly
and brought over 50 lawsuits against various utilities with plants
in the Midwest and the South.
Over the past two years, one of the major goals of the utilitieswhich
have grown in size and power under the impact of deregulation
in the late 90shas been to push for specific measures that
undermine the ability of the government to use NSR to actually
force changes in old plants. The companies stand to save hundreds
of millions of dollars by evading the requirement to install costly
pollution controls.
The drive to undercut NSR has become particularly intense as
the governments cases against the utilities have begun to
meet with some success in the courts. So far, the government has
agreed to settlements in five of the cases, including a $1.2 billion
agreement with Virginia Electric Power. A result of a suit brought
against the company for repairs it made in eight of its power
plants in Virginia and West Virginia, the settlement is the largest
in the history of the Clean Air Act. Part of the money will go
towards installing pollution controls.
In early August, a federal judge ruled that Ohio Edison, a
utility owned by FirstEnergy Corp., violated NSR. According to
the finding, the modifications carried out by Ohio Edison were
not routine in any sense of the term. The level of the fine
has yet to be announced. FirstEnergy is at the center of investigations
into the cause of the Northeast energy blackout earlier this month.
These cases have been pursued by the Justice Department despite
opposition from sections of the Bush administration, particularly
the Energy Department and Vice President Dick Cheney. Leading
officials within the EPA have strongly opposed dropping the enforcement
of the governments own environmental standards. Government
officials from eastern statesincluding Republicans such
as New York Governor George Patakihave also favored keeping
NSR. These positions were reflected in the mild resistance of
Christine Whitman, the former chief of the agency, to the policies
that are presently being implemented. Whitman recently stepped
down from the EPA and announced that she would not seek a renewal
of her office if Bush were reelected.
In early 2002, a decision was made to continue with the existing
lawsuits without beginning any new cases. At the same time, the
administration sought to undercut the legislation upon which the
suits were based. In this way utilities were encouraged to hold
out on settling the cases on the hopes that the laws would eventually
be changed. Eric Schaeffer, a Reagan-appointed official who stepped
down from the EPAs top enforcement position in February
2002, announced in his letter of resignation, We are fighting
a White House that seems determined to weaken the rules we are
trying to enforce.
Revision of NSR was one of the main concerns of Cheneys
energy task force, which produced the National Energy Policy Report
in May 2001. Included in that report was a directive to the EPA
to examine the provision and propose changes.
The companies that have most vociferously pushed NSR reform
were heavily involved in Cheneys energy task force. The
Edison Electric Institute, an energy industry group, had at least
14 contacts with the task force as Cheney was formulating the
administrations energy policy. The institutewhich
includes all the major utilities involved in the government lawsuitshas
contributed some $600,000 to the Republican Party from 1999 to
2002. Many of the major utilities that own coal-fired plantsincluding
FirstEnergyhave individually lobbied for the changes.
While the EPA delayed carrying out Cheneys directive,
in December 2002 the agency announced a series of changes. Most
of these related to one of the two NSR triggers, namely that the
renovations at an old plant must significantly increase emissions
of certain pollutants. By changing the way such emissions are
accounted for, the new rules effectively increased the threshold,
allowing plants to generate more emissions without this constituting
a significant increase.
Before implementing any changes, the EPA is obligated to present
a draft proposal for public comment. When it issued the final
rules on emissions, the agency also published a draft of a new
rule that would define what is meant by routine maintenance.
It is this proposal that was finalized on Wednesday.
The manner in which the rule was finally implemented is itself
significant. The measure is broadly opposed, not only by the public
as a wholethe EPAs invitation for public comment generated
over 200,000 letters opposed to the measurebut even within
the political establishment.
Hence the administration sought to withhold the extent of the
new rule until the moment that it was implemented. The December
2002 draft omitted details critical to understanding the impact
of the changes. For example, EPA stated that it was considering
revising NSR so as to automatically count as routine maintenance
any renovations below a certain percentage of the cost of replacing
the equipment. However, it only gave a broad range of possible
percentages under consideration, anywhere from zero to 50 percent.
A draft of the final rule that was leaked to the Natural Resource
Defense Council (NRDC), an environmentalist group, only called
for a threshold of X percent.
The entire process by which NSR has been modified was designed
to circumvent Congress. Because it is part of the Clean Air Act
and was enacted by the legislature, NSR can only be revoked through
an act of Congress. It is unlikely that the administration could
push such a measure through. Indeed Bushs Clear Skies
initiative, which was designed to replace the Clean Air Act, has
stalled in Congress. Instead, the EPA has issued clarifications
that essentially accomplish the same thing.
Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal noted that
the revocation of NSR was being carried out by dictatorial
administrative edict.
The recent departure of Whitman may also have played a role
in the timing of the new rule. Currently, there is no chief of
the EPA. The acting administrator, Marianne L. Horinko, made the
announcement on Wednesday. Utah Governor Michael Leavittwho
is to have his Senate confirmation hearing as the next head of
the EPA hearing next monthwas relieved of having to announce
and take responsibility for the decision himself.
Major consequences for health and the environment
The 540 old coal power plants governed by NSR produce about
half of the countrys electricity and account for the greater
part of the air pollution caused by power generation.
The energy industry and the EPA have claimed that the new measures
will actually decrease pollution. Companies will be encouraged
to make renovations at their old plants by easing the threat of
regulatory action. This rule is desperately needed to make
Americas power plants, factories and refineries safe and
reliable, argued Jeffrey Marks, director of air quality
policy for the National Association of Manufactures, the industry
group. Scott Segal, a utility lobbyist, stated that the rule will
move us along the path of improving efficiency and reliability
of the electric power system. Officials at the EPA have
made similar claims.
The argument ignores the fact that for NSR to be triggered,
pollutant emissions must increase. Renovations that would decrease
pollution were never regulated in the past.
The Congressional General Accounting Office (GAO) recently
issued a report that found that the EPA had no solid data to back
its assertions that the earlier modifications to NSR would reduce
emissions. Instead, EPA relied primarily on anecdotal information
provided by the industries most affected by new source review
in concluding that the program discouraged some energy efficiency
projects, including some that would have reduced air emissions.
In other words, the energy industry stated that reforming NSR
would improve the environment, and the EPA simply parroted what
it said, with no independent verification.
The Council of State Governments has concurred with the GAO.
In a recent report, the council not only found that the EPA had
no scientific foundation for making its claims about reduced emissions,
but that toxic emissions would actually increase substantially.
Under the changes finalized in December, a single boiler emitting
505 tons of pollution annually could increase its emissions to
938 tons and not violate the new rules.
According to the NRDC, under the new scheme, All of the
Clean Air Act violations the Justice Department is prosecuting
at nine Tennessee Valley Authority power plants and those at a
recently convicted Ohio Edison plant would have been allowed...The
upgrades at those plants increased air pollution by hundreds of
thousands of tons, but because they cost less than 20 percent
of the replacement value of the process units, TVA and Ohio Edison
would not have had to install modern pollution controls under
the new rule.
In an August 22 statement, the NRDC cited a study performed
by Abt Associates, a consulting firm that often works for the
EPA. The study found the failure to install modern pollution controls
at the plants brought to court by the Clinton administration has
resulted in 5,000 to 9,000 premature deaths and 80,000 to 120,000
asthma attacks per year. The EPA itself has estimated that 7 million
tons of air pollution would be eliminated annually if it won all
of the cases currently pending in the courts.
The National Academy of Public Administrationa congressionally
chartered research organizationreleased a study earlier
this year that called for an increase in the strength of NSR.
It found that NSR has done very little to cut down pollution at
old generating plants and called for measures that would shut
down older power plants if they did not put in place pollution
controls within 10 years.
Contrary to congressional intent, the report stated,
many large, highly polluting facilities have continued to
operate and have expanded their production (and pollution) over
the past 25 years without upgrading to cleaner technologies. The
result: thousands of premature human deaths, and many thousand
additional cases of acute illnesses and chronic diseases caused
by air pollution.
See Also:
Bush lied to NYC on post-9/11 pollution
crisis
[28 August 2003]
The North American blackout: deregulation,
profit and the decay of the social infrastructure
[23 August 2003]
A profile of Ohio-based FirstEnergy
Enron was no aberration
[23 August 2003]
Bush announces new
global warming plan: a Valentines Day gift for energy corporations
[23 February 2002]
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