EPA to decide how to treat coal ash
Aug 27 - USA TODAY
The U.S. coal industry is bracing for tighter and more costly regulation
of its waste. Environmental groups say that it's about time.
The Environmental Protection Agency next week is set to begin a month of
hearings on whether coal-ash waste -- what's left after coal is burned
to make electricity -- should be effectively treated as hazardous waste
subject to tighter safeguards.
Environmental groups say it should. But industry groups say safety can
be achieved without treating the waste as hazardous, which could make it
less attractive to recyclers. Some 43% of coal-ash waste is used in such
things as concrete, cement and wallboard.
The EPA has said it may make a decision by the end of next year. The
impact could potentially be broad, affecting hundreds of coal plants
nationwide and the people who live near them.
"The question isn't whether to regulate, but how," says Jim
Roewer, executive director of the industry-focused Utility Solid Waste
Activities Group.
The EPA is weighing two proposals. One is more stringent than the other
and is supported by environmental groups. It would call the ash a
"special" waste and effectively treat it as hazardous. It would also add
regulations inside plants and on trucks, require more safeguards on
closed sites, and involve the EPA in enforcement.
The other proposal -- supported by industry -- would not treat coal ash
as a hazardous waste and would, among other things, leave enforcement of
rules up to citizens. They could force changes by bringing lawsuits
against power plants. States could act as citizens.
Roewer says that the more stringent proposal could cost the industry $20
billion a year and be so burdensome that some plants may close because
they can't afford the changes. "It's regulatory overkill," Roewer says.
The environmentalists say the other proposal wouldn't effectively
protect communities. "We're hoping to make this a battle of the facts,"
says Lisa Evans of Earthjustice.
The EPA in May proposed the first-ever national rules for the management
and disposal of coal ash. It's currently regulated by states with
different standards.
Coal ash contains contaminants such as mercury, cadmium and arsenic,
which are associated with cancer and other health effects, the EPA says.
Without protection, they may leach into groundwater and migrate to
drinking water, the agency says.
The EPA started to push for the regulation after a coal-ash spill in
2008 in Tennessee required hundreds of millions of dollars in cleanup
and caused broad environmental damage.
Environmental groups say widespread contamination to water supplies near
coal-ash sites has already occurred. In a report Thursday,
environmentalists alleged that 39 coal-ash sites in 21 states have
contaminated surface or groundwater, based on analysis of state records.
At each site where groundwater was monitored, concentrations of heavy
metals such as arsenic or lead exceeded federal health-based standards
for drinking water, the report said.
The 39 sites are in addition to 31 others named by the groups in
February. The EPA has identified an additional 67 sites where water has
been contaminated, the environmental groups say.
Most of the sites are in big coal states, such as Ohio, Illinois,
Indiana, Kentucky and Pennsylvania.
Environmentalists fear more contamination at other sites -- which number
about 900 nationwide, the EPA says -- because many states don't require
groundwater monitoring near coal-ash sites. "When you look, you will
find contamination," says Jeff Stant of the Environmental Integrity
Project, a non-profit formed by former EPA attorneys. He says health
studies have never been done on residents near coal-ash sites.
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