
EPA mercury rules for electricity generating units are based on false science and economics
Guest post by Craig Rucker
The Environmental Protection Agency claims its “final proposed” Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT) rules will eliminate toxic pollution from electrical generating units, bring up to $140 billion in annual health benefits, and prevent thousands of premature deaths yearly – all for “only” $11 billion a year in compliance costs.
This may be true in the virtual reality of EPA computer models, linear extrapolations, cherry-picked health studies and statistics, government press releases and agency-generated public comments. However, in the real world inhabited by families, employers and other energy users, the new rules will bring few benefits, but will impose extensive costs that the agency chose to minimize or ignore in its analysis.
Emissions of mercury and other air toxics from power plants have been declining steadily for decades, as older generating units have been replaced with more efficient, less polluting systems or retrofitted with better pollution control technologies. While a few older plants still violate EPA’s draconian proposed rules – the new rules are not based on credible scientific and epidemiological studies.
As independent natural scientist Dr. Willie Soon and CFACT policy advisor Paul Driessen pointed out in their WallStreetJournal and Investor’sBusinessDaily articles, and in Dr. Soon’s 85-page critique of EPA’s draft rules, US power plants account for only 0.5% of the mercury in US air. Thus, even if EPA’s new rules eventually do eliminate 90% of mercury from power plant emission streams, that’s still only 90% of 0.5% – ie, almost zero benefit. The rest of the mercury in US air comes from natural and foreign sources, such as forest fires, Chinese power plants and the cremation of human remains (from tooth fillings that contain mercury and silver).
EPA fails to recognize that mercury is abundant in the earth’s crust. It is absorbed by trees through their roots – and released into the atmosphere when the trees are burned in forest fires, fireplaces and wood-burning stoves. In fact, US forest fires annually emit as much mercury as all US coal-burning electrical power plants. Mercury and other “pollutants” are also released by geysers, volcanoes and subsea vents, which tap directly into subsurface rock formations containing these substances.
The agency compounds these errors by claiming fish contain dangerous levels of mercury that threatens the health and mental acuity of babies and children. In making this claim, the agency commits four more grievous errors. First, it ignores the fact that selenium in fish tissue is strongly attracted to mercury molecules and thus protects people against buildups of methylmercury, mercury’s more toxic form.
Second, EPA based its toxicity claims on a study of Faroe Islanders, who eat few fruits and vegetables, but feast on pilot whale meat and blubber that is high in mercury and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) – but very low in selenium. Third, it ignored a 17-year Seychelles Islands evaluation, which found “no measurable cognitive or behavioral effects” in children who eat five to twelve servings of fish per week.
Fourth, it used computer models to generate linear extrapolations from known or assumed toxic levels down to much lower levels. Not only is this method contrary to sound science and epidemiology; it resulted in politicized “safety” levels that are twice as restrictive as Canadian and World Health Organization mercury standards, three times more restrictive than US Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, and four times tougher than US Food and Drug Administration recommendations. No wonder the Centers for Disease Control says blood mercury levels in US women and children are already well below excessively “safe” levels set by EPA.
Simply put, EPA grossly exaggerated the health benefits of its proposed mercury rules – and then claimed additional mercury benefits based on double counting of reductions in particulate matter. It also ignored the adverse effects that its rules will inflict. Not only is EPA’s anti-mercury campaign scaring mothers and children into not eating nutritious fish that is rich in Omega-3 fatty acids. It is also raising electricity heating, air conditioning and food costs, impairing electrical reliability, costing jobs, and thereby harming the health and welfare of countless Americans.
Energy analyst Roger Bezdek has calculated that utilities will have to spend $130 billion to retrofit older plants – and another $30 billion a year to operate, maintain and power the energy-intensive pollution control equipment they will be forced to install. Moreover, under its MACT rules, EPA intends to micromanage every aspect of power plant operations. It will now cite companies for violations even if emissions fully comply with air quality standards, if operators merely deviate from new agency “work practice standards” and “operational guidelines,” even under unusual weather conditions or equipment malfunctions that are beyond the operators’ control.
While it is true that older power plants are more significant sources of toxic air emissions, those plants are mostly in key manufacturing states that burn coal to generate 48-98% of their electricity. Many utility companies cannot justify those huge costs – and thus plan to close dozens of units, representing tens of thousands of megawatts – enough to electrify tens of millions of homes and small businesses. Illinois alone will lose nearly 3,500 MW of reliable, affordable, baseload electricity – with little to replace it.
Electricity consumers could pay at least 20% more in many states within a few years. According to the Chicago Tribune, Illinois families and businesses will pay 40-60% more. That will severely affect business investment, production and hiring – and family plans to repair cars and homes, save for college and retirement, take vacations, or have health physicals or surgery.
Chicago public schools will have to pay an additional $2.7 million annually for electricity by 2014, says the Tribune. Hospitals, factories and other major electricity users will also be hard hit. Many poor and minority families will find it increasingly hard to afford proper heating and air conditioning. Further job losses and economic stress will lead to further reductions in living standards and nutrition, more foreclosures and homelessness, and additional drug, alcohol, spousal and child abuse.
The very reliability of America’s electricity grid could be at risk, if multiple power plants shut down. Brownouts, blackouts and power interruptions will affect factory production lines, hospital, school, farm and office operations, employment, and the quality of food, products and services.
The impact on people’s health and welfare is patently obvious. But EPA considered none of this.
EPA insists there was strong public support for its rules. However, its rules were clearly based on false, biased or even fraudulent information. Furthermore, EPA itself generated much of that public support.
The agency recruited, guided and financed activist groups that promoted its rulemaking. Over the past decade, it gave nearly $4 billion to the American Lung Association and other advocacy organizations and various “environmental justice” groups, according to a Heritage Foundation study. EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson and members of her staff also visited historically black and other colleges – giving speeches about “toxic emissions,” providing templates for scare-mongering posters and postcards, and making it easy for students to send pro-rulemaking comments via click-and-submit buttons on websites.
This EPA action does nothing to improve environmental quality or human health. In fact, by advancing President Obama’s goal of shutting down power plants and raising electricity costs, it impairs job creation, economic recovery, and public health and welfare. It is intrusive government at its worst.
It is a massive power grab that threatens to give EPA nearly unfettered power over the electrical power we need to support our livelihoods and living standards.
Congress, states, utility companies, affected industries, school districts and hospitals, and families and citizen groups should immediately take action to postpone the MACT rules’ implementation. Otherwise, their harmful impacts will be felt long and hard in states that depend on coal for their electricity.
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Craig Rucker is CEO of the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow.
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Once upon a time, my daughter came home with a school assignment to bring in five samples of different metals – I immediately thought copper water pipe, and them my father’s old piece of silver waveguide (another sort of pipe), and then my eyes lit up.
In addition to the pound or two of mercury in a high power switch component I pulled from a computer being scrapped (back when computers weighed a ton), I had a film can and in that a little glass container with a snap on lid. Inside the container was mercury from a thermometer my daughter broke when she was little.
I wrote Hg on top of the film can, and nearly gave it to my daughter when I realized the better hack was to leave the mercury at home, so gave her the empty film can with instructions to be sure the teacher saw the “Hg”. Worked great – the teacher told my daughter “Don’t open that!” and took it from her but quickly realized it was too light to hold anything interesting.
Ultimately – I used to have two of those switches – the teacher has one of them now.
I keep all that stuff in the box marked “Heirloom Chemicals” – silicon wafers, tungsten turnings, uranium (mostly non-worrisome varieties), and other stuff that may encourage my daughter to keep me healthy and alive as long as possible. 🙂
davidgmills says:
December 26, 2011 at 4:18 pm
“I would bet that the increase in life expectancy has a lot more to do with things like clean water, uncontaminated food, antibiotics, and other medical advances, than it has with heat and A/C.”
And I bet that “clean water, uncontaminated food, antibiotics, and other medical advances” have a lot more to do with cheap energy than you’ll ever admit.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mad_hatter_disease
It would appear that the risk from Hg isn’t so much death as becoming an environmentalist.
Askgerbil Now (@Askgerbil) says:
“Forest fires are not a “natural source” of mercury emissions. “it comes from industrial …sources, often settling into soil and plant matter.”
If the above statement is true, then how did mercury get into the plant matter that formed coal in the first place?
Clams?…
Moderator: Typo in the first sentence of this post???
“The Environmental Protection Agency clams its “final proposed” Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT) rules will eliminate toxic pollution from electrical generating units,
Claims – not clams?
[Fixed, thanks. ~dbs, mod.]
davidgmills says:
December 26, 2011 at 4:18 pm
@ur momisugly James Sexton
I would bet that the increase in life expectancy has a lot more to do with things like clean water, uncontaminated food, antibiotics, and other medical advances, than it has with heat and A/C.
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That’s probably true. But, food storage, clean water, medical advances, antibiotics……. all made possible by firing up the coal plants.
@ur momisugly Ric Werme says:
December 26, 2011 at 5:01 pm
Once upon a time, my daughter came home with a school assignment to bring in five samples of different metals – I immediately thought copper water pipe, and them my father’s old piece of silver waveguide (another sort of pipe), and then my eyes lit up.
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And let us not forget all that lead that many of us keep on hand in little boxes. Perhaps someday to be donated to deserving party or parties. 😉
so lets shut down our power plants so food can spoil, hospitals can have people die, and the general public are without its use… then force the use of mercury filled bulbs so that if one breaks you get 15 years of exposure in one inhalation… for you kids to deal with daily….
this makes no sense to anyone with functioning brain cells…
so which is it ??? bad or good???
these fools want it both ways…. GE gets rich from the bulbs and Liberals get rich from their kickbacks in green companies that fail in 6 months…… one need only follow the money to realize this is about consolidation of power…
Thanks for pointing out the faithful’s absurdity, Walter. I was hoping I wasn’t the only one that noticed.. Some people simply need repeat visits from a clue bar.
Mark
davidgmills says:
December 26, 2011 at 4:30 pm
@ur momisugly David
How the hell do you know that 11,000 lives per year would not be saved if Hg levels were lowered to the new standard?
If we quit driving cars, about 35,000 people would not die in car accidents every year.
The difference between the two things to a layman is that there is clear cause and effect with car accidents and no clear cause and effect as to Hg deaths.
But to an expert in Hg poisoning, the cause and effect may be very clear. Maybe they know Hg poisoning when they see it.
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It is quite likely that if ‘we’ (I presume you mean US citizens) stopped driving cars there would be less deaths from road accidents. I am not sure whether you include trucks in your figures, but am guessing you refer to all kinds of road accidents. I say ‘less’ because horse drawn vehicles and bicycles have accidents too.
Now, how many people would die if there were no cars to get either patients or staff to hospitals? If road transportation was not available to deliver food everywhere and medicines from factories to warehouses to hospitals? I could go on, but hopefully you are getting the drift. All actions have costs and benefits. This EPA initiative appears to be heavy on costs and very light – to put it charitably – on benefits.
As for ‘experts’ knowing Hg poisoning when they see it, one hopes that they do. But the EPA’s calculations in these matters are not based on real people. It is all done with models, which is not surprising as cases of demonstrable Hg poisoning are very rare indeed.
Its important to fight the EPA on every level. They have no interest in actually making the environment safer. If they did, they would ban cigarettes. No, its all about political power and control. Today mercury from power station, tomorrow, who knows?
Wow, gerbil. Talk about myopic.
Mark
Askgerbil Now (@Askgerbil) says: December 26, 2011 at 12:30 pm re plants as a source of mercury.
You kill your own argument. The second reference notes that mercury in coal comes from plants, etc. Since it got into plants in pre-industrial days, it will be getting into plants today, will it not?
I studied mercury accumulation in the human food chain in my postgrad years. It is a very complex subject in which gross simplifications are, as usual, unacceptable.
Dr. Dave says:
December 26, 2011 at 2:14 pm
“I could MAYBE understand it if the EPA had gone after particulates emitted by older coal fired power stations.”
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Dr. Dave-
The EPA as “been after” particulates for almost 40 years. Particulates were one of the original criteria pollutants.
For counties in the U.S. that are don’t meet the ambient air quality standard (AAQS) for PM10 (particulate matter under 10 microns in size) see:
http://www.epa.gov/oar/oaqps/greenbk/mappm10.html
For U.S. counties that don’t meet the 2006 PM2.5 (particulate under 2.5 microns) AAQS see:
http://www.epa.gov/oar/oaqps/greenbk/mappm25_2006.html
The PM 2.5 standard is the more important since particles 2.5 microns and less can get down into the lungs.
The take away from these maps is that there are only a few areas in the whole country that don’t meet the ambient air particulate standards.
Rather naive there, johanna. He is not capable of “getting the drift,” uless it supports his foregone conclusions. Facts are irrelevant when ideology is at play. Such people suffer immensely if (when) the bubble finally bursts. The psychological impact certainly qualifies as punishment, albeit harsh.
Mark
Are the planets best and brightest at it again? LMGDMFAO
My family and I have looked at this sad planet and booked a one way passage to Alpha Centauri B 1V! At the moment there are no humans on the planet, but shortly we expect about 7 billion or so and so. We just hope that the so and so stay on Earth with the mess that they have created! (We are told that for six months of the year the sky is lit with light from Alpha Centauri A that is equal to thousands of full moons. We should be able to read at midnight out on the front porch).
Ric Werme says: December 26, 2011 at 5:01 pm Heirloom chemicals.
Coincidence! I keep a collection also. Some of the most beautiful photos I have ever seen were from secondary uranium minerals exposed to ultra violet light, giving fluorescence. Some is a similar colour to that object that Homer Simpson finds in his shirt while driving home. At school we used to play with kilos of mercury at a time (spread through a class of about 50) and inevitably some spilled on the floor, every time. The more adventurious used to try to make fulminate.
I can’t speak for myself, but these huge dollops of mercury appear not to have harmed my schoolmates of all those years ago.
It was once stated that poliomyelitis was a disease of the cleanly people. Smallpox incidence was probably reduced in history by prior cowpox caused by playing in the muck and mystery. Sometimes it seems the EPA forgets that immune systems need to be challenged, sometimes, to toughen up.
davidgmills says:
December 26, 2011 at 4:30 pm
“If we quit driving cars, about 35,000 people would not die in car accidents every year.”
What do you suggest; horse buggies?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_horse_accidents
A physicist says: Modern CFL lamps do substantially reduce mercury emissions, and that’s a fact.
No, you have to take pathways into account. If Hg emission from any source never passes into a person, in the extreme logical case, then it’s a bit pointless getting worked up about emissions. Now show me that CFLs do reduce the amount of mercury entering the average human body, then perhaps go on to the toxicity of various chemical forms … There are lifetimes of work to be done before you can validate your generalisation.
Have you noted how the waiting rooms of hospitals are crammed with people asking where to join the line for mercury poisoning?
If you burn coal in a pure oxygen environment you get just water vapor and CO2 outputs. Now if they could get their heads out of their behinds on the CO2 issue (the water vapor is easy to condense) and let them do it we would not have this problem. Once again a technical solution to a problem is found IF we can get over the “CO2 is evil” nonsense.
As to generating a pure oxygen environment which used to be very energy intensive we have yet another technical solution. Ceramic tubes that allow oxygen through
http://www.physorg.com/news105326696.html
This is all 5+ year old technology. Can somebody please teach the EPA to use Google? Maybe we should all send them the site link with “Let Me Google That For You” (truly funny idea).
http://lmgtfy.com/
We are such sissies today..
Didn’t every boomer have a small container of mercury that they would rub on pennies to try to pass them off as dimes?
Truth be told, I had my dads box of dynamite to play with. I tested one stick by shooting a 22 thru it. Nothing happened. However, when you stuck a ‘cap’ into it, with a long fuse, you could blow up any tree stump. Just be sure to dodge incoming debris if you are within a hundred yards. Loved the smell of dynamite!
Since we have become urbanized, we have become a nation of sissies, and the EPA is out of control. I would close the EPA, as it has had 40 years of functioning, and the air quality is quite acceptable. Let the States take over.
Is this the same ‘mercury’ that is used worldwide in Amalgam Fillings?
Just curious….do the EPA powers and regulations cover the inside of our mouths?
We know that we breath out the dreaded CO2…now we’re exhaling ‘toxic’ mercury fumes…
seems like human beings are just plain evil.
PM 2.5 standards are a cruel ugly evil joke, since 90% or more of PM 2.5 comes from DIRT ROADS!!!
“The particular type of emissions that gets talked about now as the main health concern is called PM2.5, or ultra-fine particles smaller than 2.5 microns in diameter. According to Environment Canada’s emissions inventory, Ontario’s coal-fired power plants released 699 tonnes of PM2.5 in 2009. Is that a lot?
…
According to Environment Canada, dust from unpaved roads in Ontario puts a whopping 90,116 tonnes of PM2.5 into our air each year, nearly 130 times the amount from coal-fired power generation.
Using the Clean Air Alliance method for computing deaths, particulates from country-road usage kills 40,739 people per year, quite the massacre considering there are only about 90,000 deaths from all causes in Ontario each year. Who knew?”
http://opinion.financialpost.com/2011/05/16/ontarios-power-trip-the-failure-of-the-green-energy-act/
davidgmills says:
December 26, 2011 at 4:30 pm
@ur momisugly David
How the hell do you know that 11,000 lives per year would not be saved if Hg levels were lowered to the new standard?
Well Mr Mills, show me your power, in your own words tell me how the EPA came to the conclusion of 11,000 lives saved.