EPA Stalls On CO2 Rules
Greenhouse Gas: Agency puts off proposal to cut power plant emissions
Jeff Johnson<http://pubs.acs.org/cen/staff/biojwj.html>

EPA has backtracked from its scheduled release of proposed rules limiting 
greenhouse gas emissions from coal-fired electric utilities. Instead, 
EPA<http://www.epa.gov/> said in a statement it will issue the proposal “soon.”

Last December, EPA announced that it would propose regulations to cap carbon 
dioxide emissions from large power plants in July 2011 and from refineries in 
December 2011 and that it would issue final regulations for utilities in May 
2012 and for refineries in November 2012. These two industries, EPA said, 
produce nearly 40% of U.S. greenhouse gas pollution.

EPA said in a statement it will issue the proposed rules “soon.”

Although EPA underscored that the regulations would be phased in over two years 
and address only large, new or modified power plants and refineries, the agency 
faced a firestorm of opposition from utility and refinery owners, trade 
associations, and their allies in Congress. These opponents say CO2 regulations 
would be costly and impossible to implement.

In June, EPA announced it could not meet the originally set July date for 
utilities and delayed it for two months. On Sept. 19, however, the agency 
announced it could not meet the pushed-back date for utilities; EPA officials 
would not comment on the status of the refinery proposal.

EPA’s plan to limit CO2 emissions was driven by litigation from states and 
environmental groups arguing that EPA has authority and responsibility to 
regulate greenhouse gas emissions through the Clean Air Act. The U.S. Supreme 
Court agreed with the groups, and with support from the Obama Administration, 
EPA moved ahead and began the regulatory process under the Clean Air Act. By 
doing so, the agency avoided the need for action from a Congress that opposes 
greenhouse gas legislation.

Environmental groups were disappointed with the delay, they said, particularly 
in light of President Barack Obama’s recent decision not to toughen 
ground-level ozone standards (C&EN, Sept. 12, page 
7<http://pubs.acs.org/cen/news/89/i37/8937notw1.html>). In a Sept. 20 letter to 
the President, 19 environmental groups, many of which were parties to the 
original litigation, urged EPA to issue final regulations next year.
Chemical & Engineering News
ISSN 0009-2347
Copyright © 2011 American Chemical Society

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