Friday, July 30, 2010

Watts Up With That Reaches Milestone

Watts Up With That, the Web's premier blog on climate change, has just had its 50 millionth visit. Good news for a fantastic site. Operated by Anthony Watt on a shoestring, and with help from volunteer moderators, it is the go-to site for information about all things related to weather and climate change. He's a skeptic, but welcomes comments from all sides. You need only compare his site with the alarmist sites like RealClimate to see the difference in approach. Joe Romm, Gavin Schmidt and others in the warmist camp are shrill, offensive defenders of the global warming faith who squelch comments supporting opposing views. It's no wonder that their sites appear to be declining in following.

Other great sites to look at are Climate Audit (pretty technical, run by Steve McIntyre, the destroyer of the hockey stick) and Bishop Hill, an Englishman with a great take on climate change.

EPA Rejects Petitions to Reconsider Greenhouse Gas Findings

In a decision that will surprise no one, EPA rejected requests by citizens, corporations and states to reconsider its determination that greenhouse gases threaten the public health and environment. Some or all of them will presumably file suit to challenge EPA's decision, joining the large number of lawsuits challenging other aspects of the EPA's decision to regulate GHG emissions. The EPA decision, and related information, can be found here.

Several years ago, in the case of Massachusetts v. EPA, the US Supreme Court decided that carbon dioxide is a pollutant, as that term is defined in the Clean Air Act. Section 202(g) of the Clean Air Act defines an air pollutant as "any . . . substance or matter which is emitted into or otherwise enters the ambient air." The definition is so broad that the Court had no problem finding that carbon dioxide and other GHGs are pollutants, and sent the matter back to EPA to determine whether they endanger human health or the environment. Here is a Wikipedia summary of the case.

On remand, EPA determined that GHGs pose a danger, primarily due to their supposed effects on global climate change. EPA reconsidered that decision in response to the petitions, and in yesterday's action reiterated its conclusion that the world is imperiled by carbon dioxide. The result is that significant restrictions on GHG will now be required.

It's unlikely that this finding will hold up. There is too much question about the science behind the finding, and too much political opposition, for it to remain unchanged.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Comments Invited on West Virginia Voluntary Land Stewardship Program

Many clean ups of contaminated property do not end with soil or ground water contamination completely removed. It is simply too expensive to try to remediate to that last degree, and there may not be any corresponding environmental benefit. Often, the remediation depends on protections like putting parking lots down to prevent water infiltration, or placing language in deeds that prohibits use of the property for residences. If these are to be kept in place for many years, someone has to verify that they remain effective. That maybe difficult if the property owner goes bankrupt, or forgets about the restrictions.

Recognizing this growing problem, the DEP put together a work group to study how an independent body might be structured to guarantee that these "institutional and engineering controls" stay in place. My colleague Rob Lannan is on that work group and reports that


since February 2009, a select group of trade association representatives, representatives of the academic community, various state agencies, and individual companies have been meeting at the request of the DEP Secretary to discuss the feasibility of developing a voluntary land stewardship program designed to insure the continued integrity of long-term institutional controls and engineering controls at various types of remediated sites in West Virginia. Attached is draft report summarizing the Group’s work and providing certain preliminary recommendations regarding a path forward. We have been asked to provide comments on this document by Friday, July 30, 2010. Please contact Rob Lannan at 304-347-8346 or rel@ramlaw.com to provide any comments or with any questions you might have.

Thanks.

You can find the report here.


Tuesday, July 20, 2010

National Mining Association Sues EPA, Corps Over Interference With Mining

The National Mining Association has just filed suit against the US Army Corps of Engineers and US Environmental Protection Agency, alleging a systematic obstruction of the coal mine permit issuing process. The press release, which is reproduced below but may be easier to read on the NMA's website, can be found here. The complaint is here.


Washington, D.C. - The National Mining Association (NMA) today filed suit against the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) for unlawfully obstructing permitting of coal mining operations in the Central Appalachian coal region and beyond jeopardizing thousands of jobs and a vital supply of fuel to meet the nation’s electric power needs.

NMA’s lawsuit, filed in the Federal District Court for the District of Columbia, contends EPA and the Corps have circumvented clear requirements for public notice and comment of a host of federal statutes and ignored calls for peer-reviewed science as part of a deliberate policy to substitute agency “guidance” for formal rulemaking.

"NMA members’ efforts to navigate this unlawful process and obtain reasonable and predictable permit terms have been unsuccessful, leaving us no choice but to challenge the EPA and Corps policy in court," said NMA President and CEO Hal Quinn. "Detailed agency guidance is not a valid substitute for lawful rulemaking based on public notice and comment," Quinn explained. "The agencies’ continued abuse of the law to impose arbitrary standards on mining operations, state agencies and other federal regulatory bodies threatens the entire region with further economic misery and stagnant employment."

Specifically, NMA says EPA and the Corps have violated the Administrative Procedures Act, the Clean Water Act, the National Environmental Policy Act and the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act by disregarding explicit requirements for public comment and formal rulemaking procedures. Moreover, EPA has usurped authorities clearly granted to the states and other federal agencies and has used technical benchmarks for assessing water quality that are both arbitrary and capricious.

In effect, said NMA, the result has been a de facto moratorium on coal mining that is irreparably harming NMA’s member companies, the welfare of coal communities and the economy. According to a May 21 report by the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Minority staff, nearly 18,000 new and existing jobs and more than 80 small businesses are jeopardized by the unlawful policy EPA and the Corps have applied to the 190 permits still awaiting action in mid-May. The loss of jobs and economic opportunity will continue to mount, as additional permits fall into the permitting nadir.

"The Corps is allowing EPA to impose unilateral control over coal mine permits throughout Appalachia, imposing a moratorium on jobs, energy production and the economic future of communities in the region. The faulty science at the heart of this policy serves no environmental good. These actions must be held to the same standard required of all substantive rules," Quinn concluded.

For a copy of NMA’s complaint, seehttp://nma.org/pdf/tmp/072010_NMA_Complaint_ECP_Guidance.pdf.
For a copy of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Minority Staff Report, see http://nma.org/pdf/tmp/072010_Senate_Minority_Staff_Report.pdf.



West Virginia Carbon Sequestration Draft Report Issued

In 2009 the West Virginia Legislature passed HB 2860, the Carbon Dioxide Sequestration Act, located at W. Va. Code Chapter 22, Article 11A. The Act required creation of a task force to investigate the potential and problems associated with CO2 sequestration in West Virginia. Successful sequestration would have important ramifications for coal-generated power in West Virginia.

The Carbon Dioxide Sequestration Working Group issued its initial report on July 1, 2010. It is located here. Following is a short summary of the report, prepared by Anne Blankenship:

Based on the ten questions assigned to the group in the Carbon Dioxide Sequestration Act, the Working Group divided its Preliminary Report into three sections, each with a corresponding subcommittee: Feasibility, Geology & Technology, and Legal. Under the Act, the Group’s Final Report is due by July 1, 2011; the recommendations and conclusions in the Preliminary Report may change in the Final Report.

The Feasibility Subcommittee is responsible for four tasks identified in the Act: recommending appropriate methods of encouraging carbon capture and sequestration (CCS); assessing the economic and environmental feasibility of large, long-term CCS; recommending methods of facilitating the widespread use of CCS throughout the state; and assessing the costs, benefits, risks, and rewards of large-scale CCS projects in the state. The Subcommittee noted that CCS for coal plants is not commercially feasible at this time; based on this, the Subcommittee is considering a recommendation that the state pursue alternative sources of energy (natural gas, hydro, biomass, etc.) while simultaneously investing in and encouraging the development of CCS technology for coal-fired plants.

The Geology & Technology Subcommittee is tasked with identifying monitoring sites for geologic sequestration; assessing the feasibility of CO2 sequestration in the state; and assessing the state’s potential CO2 sequestration capacity. Based on rough early estimates, the state has enough storage capacity for between 47 and 147 years of CO2 injection activity.

The Legal Subcommittee is charged with analyzing the legal, regulatory, and policy aspects of CCS, with a particular focus on the acquisition of underground pore space where injected CO2 can go. In addition to other amendments to the Act, the Subcommittee recommended placing rock layers 2,500 or more feet below the surface into the public domain unless those layers are being used for the extraction or storage of gas, coal, or oil.

Friday, July 9, 2010

EPA Addreses Interstate Pollution With Significant New Transport Rule

This from Marsha Kauffman and Anne Blankenship of our office:

On July 6, 2010, the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed the Transport Rule which will require 31 states, including West Virginia, to significantly improve air quality by reducing power plant emissions that contribute to ozone and fine particle pollution in other states. When final, the Transport Rule will replace the 2005 Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR). The CAIR requirements for pollution reductions remain in effect and the CAIR regional control programs are operating while EPA works to complete the Transport Rule.

EPA is proposing one approach for reducing SO2 and NOx emissions in states covered by this rule and taking comment on two alternatives:

1. In EPA’s preferred approach, EPA is proposing to set a pollution limit (or budget) for each of the 31 states and the District of Columbia. This approach allows limited interstate trading among power plants but assures that each state will meet its pollution control obligations.

2. 1st Alternative – EPA proposes to set a pollution limit or budget for each state. This option allows trading only among power plants within a state.

3. 2nd Alternative – EPA proposes to set a pollution limit for each state and to specify the allowable emission limit for each power plant and allow some averaging.

EPA anticipates that power plants may use the following to achieve emission reductions:

· Operate already installed control equipment more frequently

· Use low sulfur coal

· Install control equipment such as NOx burners, Selective Catalytic Reduction, or scrubbers (Flue Gas Desulfurization)

The emissions budgets for West Virginia are:

SO2

NOx

2012 and 2013

205,422

51,990

2014 and later

119,016

51,990

· The emissions reductions will begin to take effect in 2012.

· West Virginia will be required to reduce emission of SO2 and NOx as well as NOx during the Ozone Season.

· Although a state may choose to develop its own state plan, EPA is proposing federal implementation plans (FIPs) for each of the states covered by the Transport Rule.

· The public comment period will run for 60 days following publication in the Federal Register.

· EPA plans to hold three (3) public hearings on the proposed Transport Rule. Information regarding the public hearings will be provided in a separate Federal Register Notice.

Monday, July 5, 2010

EPA Sets New Air Quality Standard for Sulfur Dioxide

EPA adopted a new one hour air quality standard (74 parts per billion) and revoking its prior 24 hour standard. The problems caused by SO2 are due toshort term, intense exposures rather than day-long expsures.

It's worth noting that SO2 has been reduced 71% since 1980.

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is issuing a final new health standard for sulfur dioxide (SO2). This one-hour health standard will protect millions of Americans from short-term exposure to SO2, which is primarily emitted from power plants and other industrial facilities. Exposure to SO2 can aggravate asthma and cause other respiratory difficulties. People with asthma, children, and the elderly are especially vulnerable to the effects of SO2.

“We’re taking on an old problem in a new way, one designed to give all American communities the clean air protections they deserve. Moving to a one-hour standard and monitoring in the areas with the highest SO2 levels is the most efficient and effective way to protect against sulfur dioxide pollution in the air we breathe,” said EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson. “This is one of many pollutants we’ve been able to significantly reduce through the Clean Air Act, keeping people healthy, protecting our environment and growing our economy. This new standard -- the first in almost 40 years -- will ensure continued success in meeting these challenges.”

EPA is setting the one-hour SO2 health standard at 75 parts per billion (ppb), a level designed to protect against short-term exposures ranging from five minutes to 24 hours. EPA is revoking the current 24-hour and annual SO2 health standards because the science indicates that short-term exposures are of greatest concern and the existing standards would not provide additional health benefits.

EPA is also changing the monitoring requirements for SO2. The new requirements assure that monitors will be placed where SO2 emissions impact populated areas. Any new monitors required by this rule must begin operating no later than Jan. 1, 2013. EPA is expecting to use modeling as well as monitoring to determine compliance with the new standard.

The final rule also changes the Air Quality Index to reflect the revised SO2 standard. This change will improve states’ ability to alert the public when short-term SO2 levels may affect their health.


EPA estimates that the health benefits associated with this rule range between $13 billion and $33 billion annually. These benefits include preventing 2,300 to 5,900 premature deaths and 54,000 asthma attacks a year. The estimated cost in 2020 to fully implement this standard is approximately $1.5 billion.

The first National Ambient Air Quality Standards for SO2 were set in 1971, establishing both a primary standard to protect health and a secondary standard to protect the public welfare. Annual average SO2 concentrations have decreased by 71 percent since 1980.

The final rule addresses only the SO2 primary standards, which are designed to protect public health. EPA will address the secondary standard – designed to protect the public welfare, including the environment – as part of a separate review to be completed in 2012.

EPA expects to identify or designate areas not meeting the new standard by June 2012.

More information: http://www.epa.gov/air/sulfurdioxide

West Virginia A Leader in Use of Stimulus Funds for Wastewater Projects

West Virginia is among the nation’s leaders in putting to work its wastewater infrastructure American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funds and has been recognized by the U.S. House of Representatives’ Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure.

In a letter to West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin, Committee Chairman Jim Oberstar praised the state for its aggressive efforts in quickly getting all 39 of its wastewater-related projects under construction and for the roughly 300 jobs those projects created or sustained.

Worth $139 million, the 39 projects in 22 West Virginia counties are being funded through the state’s Clean Water State Revolving Fund, with the help of $61 million in federal stimulus (ARRA) money. The state Department of Environmental Protection administers West Virginia’s State Revolving Fund.

West Virginia is one of a handful of states that has all of its ARRA wastewater projects under construction. In fact, three of West Virginia’s projects have been completed -- sewer system upgrades in the towns of Elkins and Mason and a wastewater treatment plant improvement in the town of Belle. Close to $1.6 million in federal stimulus dollars helped pay for those three projects.

“The 39 projects will provide additional water pollution control benefits to close to 198,000 West Virginia citizens, so we’re pleased that construction began quickly,” said Mike Johnson, program manager for the State Revolving Fund. “Our ability to put the projects out to bid, get them under contract and begin construction in a timely manner resulted because of the tireless efforts of the entire State Revolving Fund staff.”

The Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure performs oversight of the transportation and infrastructure provisions of the ARRA to ensure that the funds provided are invested quickly, efficiently and in harmony with the job-creating purpose of the Act.

Taiwanese Can-Do Attitude

This is the sort of initiative one would have expected from Americans in the past. On the day of the Deepwater Horizon disaster a Taiwanese company sends a new cargo ship to Portugal to be refitted as a huge oil skimmer. No guarantees from BP or the US Government that it will be approved or even needed. The engineers draft the plans while the boat is in transit, and the work is done in a month or so. The ship is now waiting in Louisiana to be tried out. It could suck up 500,000 bbl of oily water a day, making a huge dent in the floating oil.

Friday, July 2, 2010

EPA Announces Draft Pollutant Allocations for Chesapeake Bay

Maybe the "pollution diet" is a little too cute, but the idea is that West Virginia and other states will be developing limitations on phosphorus and nitrogen that are discharged to the Potomac River from the Eastern Panhandle. Each jurisdiction (Washington DC is included) will be responsible for making sure it isn't sending more than its share of nitrogen and phosphorus to the Chesapeake Bay.

PHILADELPHIA (July 1, 2010) - EPA today announced draft allocations for nitrogen and phosphorus as part of a rigorous pollution diet for meeting water quality standards in the Chesapeake Bay and its tidal tributaries, and restoring local rivers and streams throughout the 64,000-square-mile watershed.

“Restoring the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries will not be easy,” said EPA Regional Administrator Shawn M. Garvin. “While we all recognize that every jurisdiction within the watershed will have to make very difficult choices to reduce pollution, we also recognize that we must collectively accelerate our efforts if we are going to restore this national treasure as part of our legacy for future generations.”

EPA proposed watershed-wide limits of 187.4 million pounds of nitrogen and 12.5 million pounds of phosphorus annually, and divided those allocations among the six watershed states and the District of Columbia, as well as the major river basins (see link below). These loadings were determined using the best peer-reviewed science and through extensive collaboration with the states and the District of Columbia. EPA will assign draft allocations for sediment August 15.

In addition, EPA is committing to reducing air deposition of nitrogen to the tidal waters of the Chesapeake Bay to 15.7 million pounds per year. The reductions will be achieved through implementation of federal air regulations over the coming years.

The jurisdictions are expected to use the allocations as the basis for completing Watershed Implementation Plans, detailing how they will further divide these allocations among pollution sources, and achieve the required reductions. The first drafts of those plans are due to EPA by September 1. The jurisdictions are expected to have all practices in place to meet the established limits by 2025, with 60 percent of the effort completed by 2017.

EPA plans to issue a draft Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) or pollution diet for a 45-day public comment period on September 24. The final Phase 1 Watershed Implementation Plans are due November 29, and EPA will establish the Bay TMDL by December 31.

In 2017, the jurisdictions are expected to submit updated implementation plans to ensure that all the control measures needed to meet Bay water quality standards will be in place by 2025.

In 2009, EPA announced that it expects the six watershed states and D.C. to provide Watershed Implementation Plans, including detailed strategies for reducing pollutant loads to meet water quality standards in the Chesapeake Bay and its tidal tributaries. EPA also expects detailed schedules for implementing pollution controls and achieving the required pollution reductions. EPA and the jurisdictions will measure progress utilizing two-year milestones. EPA may apply federal backstop measures for inadequate plans or failing to meet the milestones.

For more information about the Chesapeake Bay TMDL visit: http://www.epa.gov/chesapeakebaytmdl/