EPA's breakdown of power plant pollution |
Back in August 2012 the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ruled (2-1) that the Cross State Air Pollution Rule, CSAPR, exceeded the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s authority by requiring some state to clean up more than their fair share of pollution. The Supreme Court has overruled that decision. CASPR was intended to prevent pollution from one state from moving into other states and preventing them from meeting their air quality goals. CSAPR, when implemented will reduce SO2 emissions by 73% from 2005 levels and NOx emissions by 54% at the approximately 1,000 coal fired electrical generation plants in the eastern half of the country. The industry has indicated that many of these plants may be forced to close. This rule is intended to help downwind states unfairly impacted by upwind states attain their 24-Hour and/or Annual particulate pollution of 2.5 micrometers or less called PM2.5 National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) and the 1997 8-Hour Ozone NAAQS. CSAPR will replace EPA's 2005 Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR).
The earth’s atmosphere is interconnected. That is accepted
when it comes to carbon dioxide, but it also applies to industrial pollutants and
soot. The EPA has estimated that just one-quarter of U.S. measured pollution
emissions from coal-burning power plants are deposited within the contiguous
U.S. The remainder enters the global cycle. Conversely, current estimates are
that less than half of all measured coal pollution emissions deposited within
the United States comes from American sources. According to the Mount Bachelor Observatory, Chinese exports
include acid rain that falls in China, Korea, and Japan, and pollutants that
enter the air stream including sulfates, NOx, black carbon, soot produced by
cars, stoves, factories, and crop burning. EPA can now address these
pollutants based on the cost of remediation instead of based on contribution by
a state.
However, as a president, CSAPR may do much more. In the next
two months the EPA is expected to propose a new sweeping set of Clean Air Act
regulations to cut emission of carbon dioxide to fight global warming.
According to the EPA the largest source of carbon dioxide is coal fired power
plants, this decision will mark the end of the era of using coal to generate
electricity in power plants. This era began with the oil crisis in 1972 and
will end with CSAPR. However, using this decision EPA can allocate carbon
dioxide “budgets” based on costs to meet the budget and potentially creates a
national carbon trading market for carbon dioxide. In addition, it could create
interstate trade and tariff issues when
allocating carbon dioxide and methane “budgets” in a world of greenhouse gas
caps and trade markets.
from EIA |
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