The reductions occurred, despite a 2% rise last year in electricity
demand in the lower 48 U.S. states, mostly due to the transition off
coal, the fossil fuel that releases large amounts of pollution when
burned.
The EPA said emissions of smog components nitrogen oxide and sulfur
dioxide last year dropped 4% and 10%, respectively, compared with
2021. Emissions of mercury, a neurotoxin which can accumulate in the
environment and make some kinds of fish unsafe to eat frequently,
fell 3%.
"Communities that live near power plants deserve the same degree of
protection from environmental and health hazards as everyone else,”
said EPA Administrator Michael Regan. "Our work is far from done,
but the data prove we're on the right path."
Emissions from power plants of the main greenhouse gas carbon
dioxide, fell 1% compared with 2021, the EPA said.
The EPA data did not mention emissions of the powerful greenhouse
gas methane from the natural gas industry, an emissions source that
environmentalists say is important to decrease as the United States
is on track to become the world's largest exporter of liquefied
natural gas, or LNG.
Earlier this month the EPA reaffirmed the 2012 legal and scientific
finding that regulating hazardous air toxics and mercury from power
plants is necessary, a required step before it can strengthen those
air regulations.
The agency is expected to issue a final rule on those pollutants in
coming months, one of a suit of regulations to clean up the power
sector and force power station operators to tighten controls or
shutter older plants.
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by Marguerita Choy)
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