U.S. limits on coal plant mercury
emissions too costly: Trump's EPA
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[December 29, 2018]
By Humeyra Pamuk
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration on Friday said limits on mercury emissions from
coal-fired power plants were unnecessary as they were too costly,
sparking an outcry from environmentalists who feared the next step would
be looser rules favoring the coal industry at the expense of public
health.
Under the Mercury and Air Toxic Standards, or MATS, enacted under former
President Barack Obama, coal-burning power plants were required to
install expensive equipment to cut output of mercury, which can harm
pregnant women and put infants and children at risk of developmental
problems.
The Environmental Protection Agency left the 2011 emission standards in
place but proposed using a different cost analysis to evaluate whether
the regulation is needed, a move that paves the way for looser rules
going forward. Its statement was issued on Friday during a partial
government shutdown.
Since August, the Environmental Protection Agency has been reconsidering
the justification for the rule. A coalition of electric utilities had
said the looser rules were not needed since they have already invested
billions of dollars in technology to cut emissions of the pollutant and
comply.
EPA said it was "proposing that it is not 'appropriate and necessary' to
regulate HAP (Hazardous Air Pollution) emissions from coal- and
oil-fired power plants... because the costs of such regulation grossly
outweigh the quantified HAP benefits."
It said its reassessment showed the cost of compliance with MATS was
between $7.4 billion to $9.6 billion annually, while the monetized
benefits were between $4 million to $6 million.
It also said the identification of unquantified benefits was not enough
to support the standards. Among such benefits, environmentalists say are
reduced healthcare costs, breathing cleaner air and drinking cleaner
water.
"The policy (Acting EPA Administrator) Andrew Wheeler and (President)
Donald Trump proposed today means more pregnant women, young children,
and the elderly will be exposed to deadly neurotoxins and poisons, just
so wealthy coal and oil barons can make a few extra bucks," Sierra Club
Beyond Coal Campaign Director Mary Anne Hitt said in a statement.
Wheeler is a former coal industry lobbyist.
"Virtually every coal plant in the U.S. has already met this lifesaving
standard, and now Trump is recklessly trying to roll it back," she said.
A study published this month by Harvard University's School of Public
Health said coal-fired power plants are the top source of mercury in the
United States, accounting for nearly half of mercury emissions in 2015.
It said the standards have markedly reduced mercury in the environment
and improved public health.
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A view of Duke Energy’s Marshall Power Plant in Sherrills Ford,
North Carolina, U.S. November 29, 2018. REUTERS/Chris Keane/File
Photo
'PLEASE STOP HELPING'
Since taking office in January 2017, Trump has targeted rolling back
Obama-era environmental and climate protections to maximize
production of domestic fossil fuels, including crude oil. U.S. oil
production is the highest in the world, above Saudi Arabia and
Russia, after a boom that was triggered more than a decade ago by
improved drilling technology.
The coal industry had challenged a 2016 conclusion by Obama's EPA
that the rule was justified because savings to U.S. consumers on
healthcare costs would exceed compliance costs. The calculations
accounted for how pollution-control equipment would reduce emissions
of other harmful substances in addition to mercury.
Trump's industry allies, including Robert Murray, CEO of private
coal mining giant Murray Energy Corp, had complained that the MATS
rule contributed to the demise of the coal business by triggering
hundreds of coal-fired power plant shutdowns and driving coal demand
to its lowest in decades.
U.S. coal-fired power generation has fallen more than 40percent
since a peak in 2007, while natural gas-fired generation soared by
about the same amount, according to the EnergyInformation
Administration.
Utilities' demand for U.S. coal is projected to fall further this
year, by around 2.5 percent to 648.2 million short tons, the lowest
in 35 years, according to the EIA.
In July, electric utilities and utility groups favoring the rule
asked the administration to keep it in place. They noted that
billions of dollars in investments for anti-pollution equipment have
already been made, and costs are being recovered from electricity
customers through regulated pricing.
"This is like when your four-year-old kid tries to clean up your
kitchen – it actually makes things worse. Please stop helping," said
a utility industry lobbyist based in Washington, who asked not to be
named. "The rule itself forced coal plant shutdowns, but they aren’t
coming back."
EPA said it will take comment for the proposal for 60 days and will
hold at least one public hearing.
(Additional reporting by Richard Valdmanis; Editing by David
Gregorio)
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