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WASHINGTON, DC, February 24, 2009 (ENS) – The U.S. Supreme Court Monday declined to consider a Bush-era rule that would have allowed a cap-and-trade approach to mercury, a toxic heavy metal emitted by power plants that burn coal and oil. Power plants are the largest source of mercury in the nation.

The Supreme Court’s decision not to hear the case invalidates the U.S. EPA’s so-called Clean Air Mercury Rule, which would have allowed dangerous levels of mercury pollution to persist under a weak cap-and-trade program that would not have taken full effect until after 2020.

The Supreme Court in effect denied an appeal, filed last year by a coalition of utilities, seeking reversal of a federal court decision vacating the mercury rule.

The original lawsuit that resulted in the February 2008 U.S. Court of Appeals ruling in favor of the states and environmental groups maintained that EPA illegally removed coal and oil-fired power plants from the list of regulated source categories under a section of the Clean Air Act that requires strict regulation of hazardous air pollutants, including mercury.

Left standing is the ruling by the appeals court that upheld the lower court ruling and rebuked the Bush-era EPA for attempting to create an illegal loophole for the power generating industry, rather than applying the Clean Air Act’s “maximum achievable control technology” standard for mercury emissions.

The Supreme Court also granted the Obama administration’s request, made two weeks ago, to drop the Bush administration appeal.

“Today’s good news is due in no small part to the leadership of the Obama administration, in renouncing the harmful Bush administration actions and embracing EPA’s responsibilities to protect the American people against mercury and other toxic pollution,” said John Walke, senior attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council.

The James H. Miller coal-fired power plant in Alabama emits more mercury than any other generating station in the United States. (Photo credit unknown)


Newly appointed EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson has pledged to move swiftly in developing tough new mercury standards for power plants.

Seventeen states and dozens of Native American tribes, public health and environmental groups, and organizations representing registered nurses and physicians, challenged EPA’s suite of rules in 2005.

The plaintiffs maintained that cap-and-trade contributed to “hot spots” for mercury, a neurotoxin linked to birth defects, learning disabilities and neurological problems.

New Jersey Attorney General Anne Milgram said the Supreme Court’s denial of an appeal petition from the Utility Air Regulatory Group ends a long legal fight by New Jersey and other states to compel the federal government to issue tough new standards for mercury and other toxic air emissions from power plants.

“As of today, the protracted legal battle that has delayed proper regulation of mercury emissions from power plants is over, and the practice of allowing those plants to spew harmful quantities of a dangerous neurotoxin into our air in violation of federal law is at an end,” Milgram said.

“The Supreme Court has now confirmed that EPA must follow the law as it is written. We are looking forward to working on rules that reflect the most stringent controls achievable for this industry, as the Clean Air Act requires,” said Ann Weeks, attorney for Clean Air Task Force who represented U.S. Public Interest Research Group, Ohio Environmental Council, Natural Resources Council of Maine, and Conservation Law Foundation in the case.

Some 1,100 coal-fired units at more than 450 existing power plants emit 48 tons of mercury into the air each year. Yet only 1/70th of a teaspoon of mercury is needed to contaminate a 25-acre lake to the point where fish are unsafe to eat, the plaintiffs pointed out.

More than 40 states have warned their citizens to avoid consuming various fish species due to mercury contamination, with over half of those mercury advisories applying to all water bodies in the state.

“We’re relieved that the Supreme Court has put the final nail in the coffin of this ill-advised regulation, which left the Adirondacks and Catskills vulnerable to continued mercury contamination,” said Neil Woodworth, executive director of the Adirondack Mountain Club. “Ninety-six percent of the lakes in the Adirondack region exceed the recommended EPA action level for methyl mercury in fish.”

“In the Catskills, health officials have advised children and women of childbearing age not to eat fish from six Catskill reservoirs, reservoirs that also provide New York City with its drinking water,” said Woodworth. “With this ruling, we can now move forward with sensible mercury controls that will help reverse these trends.”

Among the groups involved in last year’s successful court challenge was Earthjustice, who argued the case before the lower court on behalf of Environmental Defense Fund, National Wildlife Federation and Sierra Club.

“While we applaud this ruling, mercury contamination from coal-fired utilities continues to grow as new plants are approved for construction,” said Jon Mueller, Chesapeake Bay Foundation director of litigation. “Every year in the Chesapeake Bay region additional fish consumption advisories are issued. EPA must take action quickly to curtail this threat to public health.”

The EPA rules generated controversy when they were proposed in 2004, after it was discovered that industry attorneys had drafted key language that EPA included verbatim in its rule.

EPA’s internal auditor in the Office of Inspector General later discovered that EPA’s senior political management had ordered staff to work backwards from a pre-determined political outcome, “instead of basing the standard on an unbiased determination of what the top performing [power plant] units were achieving in practice.”

The top 50 most-polluting coal-burning power plants in the United States emitted 20 tons of toxic mercury into the air in 2007, finds a November 2008 report from the nonprofit Environmental Integrity Project. Of the top 10 mercury emitting power plants, all but one reported an increase as compared to the previous year.

Once released into the atmosphere, mercury settles in lakes and rivers, where it moves up the food chain to humans who eat contaminated fish. The Centers for Disease Control has found that six percent of American women have mercury in their blood at levels that would put a fetus at risk of neurological damage.

Click here [www.earthjustice.org] for a guide to the mercury levels found in various species of fish and shellfish.

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GROTON, Connecticut, June 25, 2008 (ENS) – The pharmaceutical company Pfizer Inc. has agreed to pay a $975,000 civil penalty to resolve alleged violations of the Clean Air Act at its former manufacturing plant in Groton, Connecticut. The company stopped making pharmaceuticals at the plant in January.

The settlement is the first of its type in federal court under Clean Air Act regulations controlling the emissions of hazardous air pollutants from pharmaceutical manufacturing, the U.S. Justice Department and Environmental Protection Agency announced Monday.

The new rules, known as PharmaMACT regulations, impose Maximum Achievable Control Technology, or MACT, standards – industry-specific measures that must be implemented to control hazardous air pollutants in order to prevent harm to human health or the environment.

During its production of pharmaceutical-grade chemicals, Pfizer used substances such as methanol, hydrogen chloride, methylene chloride, MTBE, hexane, toluene, and many others, which are classified by the EPA as hazardous air pollutants under the Clean Air Act.

The alleged violations occurred between October 2002 and December 2005, resulting from a failure of Pfizer’s leak detection and repair program at its Groton plant.

They included a failure to properly conduct pressure tests to identify leaks, repair leaks before start-up, equip open-ended lines with a seal, and document leak tests to establish full compliance with the requirements.


Pfizer research center at Groton,
Connecticut (Photo by Russ Glasson)

“This significant penalty, the first in federal court under the PharmaMACT regulations, should send a strong message to the pharmaceutical industry that they must be diligent in detecting and repairing leaks of hazardous substances,” said Ronald Tenpas, assistant attorney general for the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division.

“We will not wait to enforce the law until after a catastrophe occurs,” he said.

Under the agreement, Pfizer certifies that the violations have been corrected. But the EPA says the violations undermined the agency’s ability to determine compliance, which presented the risk of excess emissions of hazardous air pollutants for leaks that were not timely detected and repaired.

“All facilities that produce hazardous air pollutants must carefully adhere to all provisions of EPA’s Clean Air requirements to ensure that we are taking every necessary step to protect human health and our environment,” said Robert Varney, regional administrator of EPA’s New England office.

Pfizer, a publicly traded corporation, with 2007 revenues of $48.4 billion, operates about 80 manufacturing plants worldwide, where it makes healthcare products relating to human and animal health.

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LOS ANGELES, California, March 6, 2008 (ENS) – A cement plant that is one of the largest sources of smog-forming nitrogen oxides in California will replace polluting equipment with a state of the art kiln to reduce these emissions.

Under the terms of a $394,000 settlement between the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the TXI Riverside Cement Company reached Wednesday, the company will replace seven 50-year old short dry kilns at its Oro Grande plant, located near Victorville.

By August 2008, Riverside Cement will begin operation of a single new kiln, constructed at a cost of at least $385 million. This improvement will remove 1,500 tons annually of nitrogen oxide emissions, according to the EPA.

“We welcome any effort that reduces nitrogen oxides and ozone as a step towards healthier air,” said Deborah Jordan, director of the EPA’s Air Division in its Pacific Southwest Office in San Francisco. “Through enforcement, technological breakthroughs and corporate involvement, we will help communities get the clean air they deserve.”

The $394,000 penalty resolves various federal Clean Air Act violations, including:

* exceeding the National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants temperature limits for kilns in 2002-2004;
* exceeding nitrogen oxides limits for the kilns in 2003 through 2005;
* failing to perform opacity tests at baghouses in 2002;
* exceeding opacity limits for several emission units in 2005;
* failing to perform required inspections at certain baghouses during 2002-2004.

A baghouse is a generic name for air pollution control equipment designed around the use of engineered fabric filter tubes, envelopes or cartridges in the dust capturing, separation or filtering process.


TXI Riverside Cement plant
at Oro Grande, California
(Photo credit unknown)

Under the terms of the settlement, between now and August the Riverside Cement Company must comply with enhanced requirements for inspection and monitoring of baghouse effectiveness.

This settlement is subject to a 30 day public comment period and final court approval.

According to the California Air Resources Board, the Oro Grande facility is one of the largest sources of nitrogen oxide emissions in the state.

Nitrogen oxide is one of the components of ground-level ozone, or smog, which causes health and environmental impacts. Breathing smog can worsen respiratory illness, including emphysema and asthma. The EPA says repeated exposure may permanently scar lung tissue.

TXI Riverside Cement celebrated its 100th anniversary on August 23, 2006. After years of various owners, Riverside Cement was most recently purchased by TXI in 1998. Completion of the 2.2-million-ton plant expansion and modernization at Oro Grande will mark the company’s 102nd year.

The company says the Oro Grande plant modernization has been in the works for two years. Frank Sheets, spokesperson for TXI, told the “Victorville Daily Press” in February that the last time TXI made any major renovations was in the early 1960s. The new facility, he said, will be state of the art and make less of an impact on the environment.

“Production will go up and efficiency will go up a lot,” Sheets said, adding that the company anticipates dramatic reductions in the amount of energy consumed per ton of product of produced.

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