Jul 21 - Record, The; Bergen County, N.J.
Environmentalists predict dire consequences for New Jersey's air quality if more than 150 proposed coal power plants are built across the country. On Thursday, they urged the state to lead by example and ban new coal plants here. The activists said pollution from proposed coal plants will exacerbate global warming by 10 percent in the United States, and said New Jersey should not sue Midwestern states over power plant emissions carried eastward if it allows similar sources of pollution at home. "How good is it to sue Ohio when we are going to allow new coal plants in New Jersey?" asked Jeff Tittel, director of the New Jersey Sierra Club. Eight states, including New Jersey, sued Ohio-based American Electric Power last year, charging the country's largest power generator with breaking clean air rules by failing to cut emissions at plants said to foul the air in the Northeast. AEP's refusal to install new pollution controls means the nine coal-fired plants continue to spew sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide and soot that cause acid rain, smog and haze downwind from Ohio, the suit contends. AEP has argued that recent work it did to modify its plants was routine maintenance and did not require installation of expensive new pollution controls. Environmental Protection Commissioner Lisa Jackson said the state lacks the authority to impose moratoriums on private industry, but that it can impose restrictions and enforce regulations. One of the environmental groups, New Jersey Public Interest Research Group, released a report Thursday detailing the rush to build new coal-fired plants. Spurred on by favorable federal regulations and economic incentives, more than 150 such plants have been proposed nationwide, including two in West Deptford and Cape May County in South Jersey. "The rush to build new coal generation would take us in the wrong direction on energy policy, here in New Jersey and around the nation," said Dena Mottola, executive director of NJPIRG. Less than one-fifth of New Jersey's power was supplied by coal in 2004, the most recent year for which figures are available. In April, the BPU directed that 20 percent of the electricity used in the state by 2020 would have to come from renewable sources such as wind or solar power. (c) 2006 Record, The; Bergen County, N.J.. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved. |
No New Coal Plants, Activists Tell State; Say Policy Should Back Emissions Lawsuit