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HEALTH NEWS

EPA's New Mercury Rule Under Fire

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Contributed by William Angelos|  16 March, 2005  14:58 GMT

mercury clean air act US EPA pollution
Coal-burning electric power plants emit vast quantities of toxic air pollution; not only have they been found to be the largest unregulated source of mercury pollution but they also emit more than 80 tons per year of lead, and more than 70 tons per year of arsenic.
The new air pollution rule issued Tuesday by the US Environmental Protection Agency fails to comply with Clean Air Act requirements that all toxic emissions from power plants, including mercury, must be reduced by the maximum amount achievable, according to the nonprofit environmental law firm Earthjustice.

"To benefit polluters, EPA has broken the law," says Earthjustice attorney Jim Pew. "Not only does EPA's rule seek to allow power plants to avoid cleaning up the majority of their toxic mercury emissions, it tries to give them a get-out-of-jail-free card for thousands upon thousands of tons of other toxic chemicals that are currently not subject to any emission standards whatsoever."

Rule Leaves Millions at Risk

Mercury is a harmful neurotoxin that has been found to stall the development of children's brains, both in and out of the womb. Every year 630,000 babies are born in America with unsafe levels of mercury in their blood. More than 40 states have issued fish advisories due to mercury contamination in some or all their state's waters.

Coal-burning electric power plants emit vast quantities of toxic air pollution; not only have they been found to be the largest unregulated source of mercury pollution but they also emit more than 80 tons per year of lead, and more than 70 tons per year of arsenic.

"The Bush administration's EPA utterly failed in its job of protecting public health and the environment in issuing this regulation, and instead chose to pander to the energy industry," says Earthjustice Legislative Counsel Jim Cox. "This rule leaves millions of Americans at risk from toxic pollution in the air they breathe, the water they drink and the fish they eat."

Politicized Process

Recent reports by both the EPA Inspector General and the Government Accountability Office (GAO) have criticized the Bush administration for politicizing the process of drafting this rule.

The Inspector General found that the Bush administration's political appointees that hold top-management positions within EPA had unlawfully instructed EPA's career staff to "work backwards" from a pre-determined mercury emissions cap that the political appointees had decided upon. The cap was identical to the mercury reduction co-benefits resulting from the recently finalized Clean Air Interstate Rule.

The Inspector General's report then recommended that EPA "go back to the drawing board" to conduct an "unbiased analysis" of the facts, and issue a new rule that "didn't violate the Clean Air Act." Additionally, many Members of Congress have sent letters to EPA requesting additional studies and strong protective limits on mercury pollution -- requests that EPA has refused to answer.

"In drafting its proposal to control toxic pollution from power plants, the Bush EPA ignored the law, ignored sound science, ignored Congress, and ignored the public," says Earthjustice Legislative Associate Maria Weidner. "It seems only corporate polluters have the Bush administration's ear."

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