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Lethal Legacy: A Comprehensive Look At America's Dirtiest Power Plants
Lethal_Legacy.pdf
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Executive Summary
Since taking office in 2001, President Bush and his
administration have broken two important promises to the American
public concerning pollution emitted by the nation's oldest and dirtiest
power plants.
Just 60 days after taking office, under intense
pressure from electric utilities and the coal industry, the Bush
administration retracted its campaign promise to support a mandatory
cap on power plant emissions of carbon dioxide, the leading cause of
global warming.
Then, in August 2003, the Bush administration
issued final rule changes to the Clean Air Act's New Source Review
program, breaking a decades-old promise codified in the Clean Air Act
itself—that old power plants, when making other life-prolonging
modifications, would be required to install modern pollution controls.
This policy change marks a full retreat from the previous
administration's effort to enforce this law.
Each of these broken promises carries with it serious consequences for public health and the environment.
•
Millions of tons of soot- and smog-forming emissions each year will go
unchecked as a result of the administration's changes to the New Source
Review program. This pollution will cause as many as 400,000 asthma
attacks and 20,000 premature deaths each year.1
• This same
pollution will continue to cause acid rain and acid fog, which at
current levels has rendered 25 percent of Adirondack lakes incapable of
supporting life and has caused the decline of forest ecosystems
throughout the Eastern U.S. and Canada.2
• Our national parks
and wilderness areas will continue to be shrouded in a
pollution-induced haze, which already diminishes summertime visibility
of treasured vistas, such as those in the Great Smokey Mountains and
Shenandoah National Park, by as much as 90 percent.
• The U.S.,
which emits the most carbon dioxide in the world, will continue to
delay meaningful action to reduce its emissions of this global warming
gas.
As detailed below, enforcement of the Clean Air Act could
dramatically cut emissions from the nation's dirtiest power plants,
thereby protecting the environment and public health. Similarly,
weakening the Clean Air Act—as the Bush administration has done—could
erode progress made to improve the nation's air quality over the last
three decades. Key Findings
This report documents
the 2002 emissions of smog-forming nitrogen oxides (NOx), soot-forming
sulfur dioxide (SO2), and carbon dioxide (CO2) from the 548 dirtiest
power plants in the nation and quantifies the emissions that will
continue unabated as a result of the Bush administration's policies.
Each of the plants examined in this report emitted at least 20 tons of
"excess" NOx or SO2—emissions that could be eliminated if the plant was
to install modern pollution control equipment.
Sulfur Dioxide (SO2) Nationwide,
the 548 dirtiest plants emitted 10.1 million tons of SO2 in 2002. This
is about 64 percent of total SO2 emissions (about 15.8 million tons)
from all sources in the U.S. in 2001.3 Of this pollution, 70 percent
(7.1 million tons) was "excess," or could be eliminated if the plants
met modern emissions standards.4 Enforcing—rather than weakening—the
New Source Review rules would reduce SO2 emissions by at least this
amount.5 Sulfur dioxide pollution forms fine-particle "soot," which
causes health and environmental problems such as premature death from
heart and respiratory problems, acid rain, and haze in our national
parks.
Nitrogen Oxides Nationwide, these 548 plants
emitted 4.4 million tons of NOx in 2002. This is nearly 20 percent of
total NOx emissions (about 22 million tons) from all sources in the
U.S. In 2001.6 Of this pollution, 62 percent (2.7 million tons) was
"excess," or could be eliminated if the plants met modern NOx emission
standards.7 Enforcing—rather than weakening—the New Source Review rules
would reduce NOx emissions by at least this amount.8 NOx forms "smog"
or ground-level ozone, which in turn exacerbates or even causes
respiratory illness and asthma. Smog pollution also creates acid rain
and clouds scenic vistas.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) Nationwide,
these 548 plants emitted 2.2 billion tons of CO2 in 2002. This is
almost 35 percent of total CO2 emissions (about 6.4 billion tons) from
all sources in the U.S. In 2001.9 CO2 is the leading cause of global
warming. Recommendations
The Bush administration
should fulfill the promise of the Clean Air Act to clean up the
dirtiest power plants as well as deliver on the President's campaign
pledge to cut U.S. emissions of carbon dioxide. In order to ensure all
Americans have healthy air to breathe, the Bush administration's
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) should faithfully implement the
congressionally-mandated Clean Air Act programs applicable to power
plants, including:
• Rescinding recently adopted regulatory
changes to the New Source Review program and enforcing the rules that
were in place when the Bush administration took office;
•
Enforcing the ambient air quality standards to ensure that all
Americans will breathe air that meets federal health standards by the
end of this decade as required by the Clean Air Act;
• Setting strong sulfur and nitrogen standards for power plants; and
•
Setting mercury emission standards by December 2004 that will require
application of the maximum achievable control technology to reduce
power plant mercury emissions by 90 percent by 2008.
Overall, a sound policy to clean up air pollution from the nation's dirtiest power plants would:
• Include mandatory carbon dioxide limits requiring real reductions of carbon dioxide from the electric power sector;
•
Eliminate "grandfathering" and ensure that every plant reduces NOx, SO2
and mercury emissions to levels reflecting application of
state-of-the-art pollution controls;
• Maintain current Clean Air Act requirements and deadlines for meeting air quality goals; and
• Set aggressive national emission caps for power plant NOx, SO2 and mercury.
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