CLEAN AIR REVAMP - C&EN Global Enterprise (ACS Publications)

Sep 1, 2003 - On New 'Year's Eve last year, EPA announced a new emissions calculation method, giving companies more flexibility, last week's ...
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NEWS OF THE WEEK AIR

POLLUTION

CLEAN AIR REVAMP Industry applauds, states sue over revised EPA regulation

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AST WEEK, EPA ISSUED A NEW

Clean Air Act regulation that will affect some 17,000 old U.S. power plants, refineries, factories, and chemical plants. By modifying the act's new source review (NSR) provisions, the rule will make it easier for firms to replace equipment without installing modern pollution controls. NSR requires facilities built before 1970 to install modern air pollution controls when making equipment changes that increase pollution. But it provides an exemption for "routine maintenance" without an emissions increase. The new regulation expands the routine maintenance exemption. Industries have criticized NSR's complexity as well as how EPA calculates emissions and applies the routine maintenance exemption. On New 'Year's Eve last year, EPA announced a new emissions calculation method, giving companies moreflexibility,last week's

HAMSTRUNG

announcement changed the routine maintenance exemption. Maintenance will now be considered routine if replacement parts are "functionally equivalent" to existing components and costs do not exceed 20% of the replacement value ofthe entire unit. Old coal-fired power plants will benefit most from the change. Many ofthese plants operate without modern pollution controls, generating much of the U.S.'s electricity and air pollution. Some 50 of these facilities face federal and state lawsuits for NSR violations, and it is unclear how the new regulation will affect them. But new NSR enforcement actions will now be impossible to trigger, say states and environmental groups that oppose this and other Bush NSR changes (see page 24). Within hours of EPAs announcement, New Tfork, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and California said they will sue, as did several environmental groups, who challenge the regulation and

the process EPA used to develop it. They point to a General Accounting Office report that says EPA relied on anecdotal information from affected industries rather than cost-benefit analysis. On the other hand, groups representing all types of industries praised the change, including the American Chemistry Council. "We think this is a very narrow reform," ACC Air Team Counsel Ronald A. Shipley says. The 20% cap together with the "functionally equivalent" provisions, he says, will block companies from misusing the rule by taking five years to replace the whole plant without modernizing pollution controls, as states and environmental groups have predicted will happen. Although the change is beneficial to chemical companies, he says, not many have been held up by NSR. "Most companies weigh the costs and benefits and decide to go through the NSR hassles." For chemical companies, the new regulation is a "small and narrow change," but he adds, "Remember, small changes can mean a lot. When gasoline goes up 5 cents, it isn't much, but across the country on an annual basis it is worth billions of dollars. Across the board, this regulation will mean a lot."—JEFF JOHNSON

INVESTIGATION

GAO Report Documents Industry Voice In Energy Policy

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evelopment of the White House national energy policy occurred behind closed doors during the first months of the George W. Bush Administration, was led by the vice president's office and the Department of Energy, and was based primarily on industry advice, a new General Accounting Office (GAO) report says. The Administration used a "centralized, top-down, short-term, and labor-intensive" process involving a few hundred federal employees, GAO says, its report was requested by Democrats in Congress and ends an unsuccessful investigation

HTTP://WWW.CEN-ONLINE.ORG

into the cost and process used by the Administration to draft its national energy policy. The office of Vice President Dick Cheney refused to provide information GAO sought during its investigation. The agency sued and lost on technical grounds, and eventually chose not to continue litigation. Instead, it will rely on results from private ongoing lawsuits (C&EN,Feb.17,page29). Despite its limitations, the GAO report shows the energy policy staff meetings to have relied heavily on input from the petroleum, coal, nuclear, natural gas, and

electricity industries, whose views are reflected in the final policy. GAO says that because data were withheld by the vice president's office, GAO is unable to determine the extent that outside groups ultimately influenced the final energy policy. The vice president's office did provide 77 pages of data, two-thirds of which held no cost information and the rest of which contained information of "little or no usefulness," GAO says. DOE, EPA, and the Department of interior provided some cost data to GAO investigators, which show that about $860,000 was spent to develop the policy.-JEFF JOHNSON

C & E N / S E P T E M B E R 1. 2003

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