Tuesday, March 23, 2004
By John Heilprin, Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration is leaning toward stretching
out plans for reducing mercury pollution from power plants through
the marketplace rather than rely on technology for quick cuts. Some
plants would be able to buy their way out of reducing emissions.
The Environmental Protection Agency had offered options three months
ago for reducing the 48 annual tons of mercury emitted from 1,100
coal-burning power plants, the largest source of the pollution.
One favored reliance on a short-term technology, the other long-term
market forces through which companies could buy rights to continue
polluting from companies that do more than is required.
But studies co-sponsored by the Department of Energy and the utility
industry have found there was no existing technology to remove mercury
equally well from various types and grades of coal. EPA officials
say that makes the first option to reduce the pollution to 34 tons
by 2008 less feasible.
That leaves the second strategy — endorsed by industry — that would
establish a nationwide cap by phasing in lower ceilings on each
plant's pollution. Plants that reduce their pollution below a yet-to-be-determined
ceiling for each one could then sell credits to plants that don't.
In December, that cap was proposed at 15 tons of mercury pollution
by 2018. But now EPA Administrator Mike Leavitt is asking his staff
to analyze ways to make the goal reached sooner.
High doses of mercury can cause neurological damage, and the government
warned last week that some fish in which the toxic chemical accumulates
can pose a hazard to children and to women who are pregnant or nursing.
"The debate is what's the best option, given the available
technology. And we think that, given the state of technology, cap-and-trade
is better — and we're leaning that way," said EPA spokeswoman
Cynthia Bergman.
EPA can turn to that approach only because the Bush administration
decided in December that mercury should not be regulated as a toxic
substance requiring maximum pollution controls, reversing a Clinton
administration determination.
To meet a court-ordered deadline in a lawsuit brought by the Natural
Resources Defense Council 12 years ago, the agency must issue a
final decision before the end of 2004.
The idea of trading pollution rights rather than making every plant
reduce emissions to a specified level coincides with a position
endorsed by electric power producers.
"There currently is no commercially available mercury-specific
control technology," said Dan Riedinger, a spokesman for the
Edison Electric Institute, representing utilities. "Our hope
is that toward the end of this decade, we will have at least identified
new technologies for removing mercury from different coal types
and using different boiler configurations."
The agency's preference means some plants may have to make only
modest reductions, if any, if they choose to buy emissions credits
instead of installing pollution controls. That approach differs
radically from the Clinton administration's conclusion that mercury
could be cut by more than 40 tons annually by 2008 if the best available
technology were used.
But that conclusion was based on an assumption that technology
for removing acid-rain-causing sulfur dioxide and smog-forming nitrogen
oxides would, as a side benefit, also cut mercury emissions sharply.
"It is possible to get a 90 percent reduction in mercury emissions
in certain coal types and certain boilers, but to then make the
jump and assert a 90 percent reduction is possible across the entire
industry is simply impossible," Riedinger said. "The actual
range of reductions varies, from between about 17 percent to 90
percent."
Carol Browner, the Clinton EPA's administrator, disputed the utility
industry's claims of technological shortcomings.
"We had evidence that you could get there.... It is possible.
It is doable," Browner said at a recent news conference held
by health advocates and environmentalists on the mercury issue.
She said the agency should set emission limits at the lowest level
achievable "rather than asking industry, 'What do you feel
like doing?'"
Browner and environmentalists also complained the cap-and-trade
approach would let some facilities continue to emit mercury at high
levels, creating mercury "hot spots" for nearby populations.
EPA's own Children's Health Protection Advisory Committee wrote
Administrator Leavitt in January to advise him "the cap-and-trade
program, as proposed, may not address existing hot spots and may
create new local hot spots for mercury, disproportionately impacting
local communities."
The NRDC sued EPA in 1992 claiming it failed to determine which
utility emissions are hazardous air pollutants and decide whether
or not to regulate them. The suit was settled in 1994, then modified
in 1998 to set deadlines for action on specific pollutants.
"Just as we did with lead, we have to take mercury out of
commerce," said Linda Greer, an environmental toxicologist
at NRDC.
Source: Associated Press
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