Shutting down power plants: Imaginary benefits, extensive harm

Environmental Protection Agency Seal
Image by DonkeyHotey via Flickr

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.

___________

Craig Rucker is CEO of the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow.

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Schadow
December 26, 2011 8:21 pm

Dang! Someone had to bring up the subject of cremation, crematories and amalgam. That warm process is specified for my eventual demise. If Lisa Jackson has her way, old Colonel Cinders may be out of business when the time comes.

December 26, 2011 8:23 pm

Mercury molecules? Seems to me, mercury, a metallic element liquid at room temperature, does not form molecules. It forms compounds with other elements. But it doesn’t exist like O2, for instance.

aired
December 26, 2011 8:23 pm

The relationship between selenium and mercury in the body has become understood only in the last decade. It is not so much that selenium protects developing nervous systems from mercury, although that is part of the story. The more important truth is that excess mercury ingestion can rob the selenium that is essential for nervous system function and development. Most fish contain far more selenium than mercury. EPA administrator Lisa Jackson and her staff who are claiming a huge health benefit from controlling mercury need to look at the actual science, which is being articulated with the help of other government agencies (e.g., NOAA) and research institutions. See the following:
http://www.undeerc.org/fish/pdfs/Selenium-Mercury.pdf
http://www.undeerc.org/fish/pdfs/Selenium-Mercury.pdf

The documentary at the last link makes it clear that limiting consumption of ocean fish (to limit mercury ingestion) by pregnant and nursing mothers, in accordance with US government advisories, has been detrimental to brain development of their children.
P.S. I’m relatively new at posting, so please forgive me if the links above do not come in as “clickable.” You may have to cut and paste the addresses into your browser.

Bruce Cunningham
December 26, 2011 8:32 pm

Shutting down existing power plants just to fight CAGW is a bad idea. Not building a new one in a developing country because it would emit GHG’s is being callous to the plight and needs of the poor.
I think this video shows just how nice having electric power for light and heat and cooking really is to those who don’t have it. Making electric power far more expensive and less reliable than it has to be condemns so many to much misery. It doesn’t have to be.
This video shows how slum houses in Manila that have no windows, are dark even in the day. To those so poor that they cannot afford electricity, even a little indoor lighting during the day is a blessing! Just a plastic water bottle, some water, and a cap full of chlorine bleach gives off the same light as a 55 watt bulb, for free.
http://wimp.com/lightenup/

December 26, 2011 8:35 pm

GeoLurking wrote on December 26, 2011 at 4:54 pm


Jun 15, 2011 | By Emily Beach.. Florescent Bulb Recycling Tips … these bulbs also contain between 3.5 and 15 grams of mercury each, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency…
http://www.livestrong.com/article/209918-florescent-bulb-recycling-tips/#ixzz1hgxare2Q

That’s nonsense. The EPA, says no such thing. Even they aren’t that incompetent. Dr. Dave & A Physicist are correct.
I just weighed a CFL bulb. It weighs 54 grams, with most of the weight in the ceramic base. Do you really think that 6-28% of the unit’s total weight is mercury?
Here is what the EPA actually says about mercury in CFLs: “On average, CFLs contain about four milligrams of mercury sealed within the glass tubing. By comparison, older thermometers contain about 500 milligrams of mercury – an amount equal to the mercury in over 100 CFLs.”

morgo
December 26, 2011 9:00 pm

I can remember when we where at school back in the 50s and 60s we played with mercury in the science classes we took it home too to play with we should be all dead

Pat Moffitt
December 26, 2011 9:37 pm

daveburton says:
“On average, CFLs contain about four milligrams of mercury.”
Well if this were CERCLA you would be screwed at this level and we can all probably count the days until some group brings a suit following a release of mercury in a home claiming CERCLA oversight. EPAs concurrence policy supposedly covering residential mercury.is as far as I’m concerned unintelligible. And we can expect that real estate transaction are going to have a “did you ever break a light bulb” question.

a jones
December 26, 2011 10:08 pm

daveburton says:
December 26, 2011 at 8:35 pm
GeoLurking wrote on December 26, 2011 at 4:54 pm
Except the EPA is frankly lying to you.
For 500 milligrams you would need a pretty mighty thermometer, perhaps weather men might have used such things, but not domestic or medical ones.
Even a hundred years ago.
And notice the reference to older thermometers. Yes indeed. But again exaggeration.
You see here in the UK the NPL would for a small fee certify your thermometer for you. The fee was 2/6 when I was young. And for that you got a certificate of precision over the temperature range, the construction, mercury in glass, and the weights of the glass and the mercury. The latter to better than one percent.
500 mg indeed, try closer to a tenth of that. THEN.
Now I have a new medical thermometer which I bought some thirty years ago and calls itself the Rand Rocket.. All I can say if thinks it is a rocket it is an extremely slow one: about two minutes to get equilibrium. And it is difficult to read as well.
But all that is fine it works in the end.
And according to it’s leaflet it contains just one half a miligram of mercury.
Kindest Regards

SSam
December 26, 2011 10:41 pm

Pat Moffitt says:
December 26, 2011 at 9:37 pm
“… and we can expect that real estate transaction are going to have a “did you ever break a light bulb” question…”
And if the answer is “no” then when mercury is detected who is liable?
EPA’s statements are a;ways in flux to follow the political wind. Nothing about their actions are standard, and there is a perpetual supply of “studies” to support what ever whim they are following.
The only thing the EPA is good for, is derision and hated. They have worn out their welcome and send mixed signals about “what is good for you.” Power Plants “baaaad.” Here, stick some more mercury in your house to save money.
I think the movie “Ghost Busters” had the most accurate representation of the EPA in the character of “Walter Peck.”

J.H.
December 26, 2011 11:22 pm

There’s a word for this….. It’s called, Ecofascism.

Laurie
December 26, 2011 11:27 pm

Where did the EPA get “… nearly $4 billion to (give to) the American Lung Association” and other special interests over the last decade? I’d like to know more about that.

December 27, 2011 12:03 am

to answer Mike Bromley,mercury in small quantities is in atomic form. Once it starts to accumulate, it forms the metal we are used to. From memory, I think that was supposed to take about 10 atoms. It also forms a variety of molecules both the inorganic ones like the oxides and sulphides, as well as the organic ones like the dreaded methyl mercury. It can dissolve metals like silver and gold, but they are compounds / alloys.
Metallic mercury is not the risk for it is relatively inert. It is the organic compounds that can get into the body and bioaccumulate causing all the problems.

aeroguy48
December 27, 2011 12:21 am

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.
Being employed at an aerospace manufacturing company and of course some fed money I have noticed in the last few years an agressive push for affirmative action type of hires over other more qualified, they almost immediately claim they got asthma working here, this has become annother way in their battle cry for getting free money.

Larry in Texas
December 27, 2011 12:41 am

A physicist says:
December 26, 2011 at 2:12 pm
I second what James Sexton said to you in reply to your insipid contention that the “trade-offs” are difficult here. What decade are you living in? The 1940s or 1950s, when atmospheric pollution was worse than it is now (but far less than what it was in the 1910s and 1920s, as technology started to catch up with emissions)?
The fact is, the air in this country is far cleaner, FAR cleaner, than it has been at any time in the history of this country. The primary remaining problem with air pollution these days is ozone, manufactured mostly in the summer because of automobile emissions (even EPA admits that background levels of ozone are considerable, 55 ppb or more; this is due in large part to volatile organic compounds emitted from plants), and I don’t see that problem being solved any time soon, unless you are going to bike to work or elsewhere.
I will give some credit to EPA for the current state of the atmosphere, but I highly recommend to you the book “Clearing the Air: The Real Story of the War on Air Pollution” by Indur M. Goklany, who regularly posts at this site. As you will see, the solution to industrial air pollution was as much the responsibility of the development of technology by the private sector, if not more.
As many posters here have recognized, there is NO SUCH THING as pure, pristine air. Every attempt to raise the bar in regard to pollutants carries with it a law of diminishing returns. The more expectations you have with regard to attempts at making the current already cleaner air even more “clean,” the more it is going to cost – and the less the benefit. Lowering the existing level of mercury from 0.5% is going to be a nightmare, and yes, with no appreciable benefit. There is only one motive that EPA has for continuing to ratchet up the already high, impossible bar in connection with industrial activity: to close coal-fired power plants altogether and destroy our economy on some crackpot theory that we have to get rid of coal and that it is somehow better for all of us to freeze or to have our power out. It is quite obvious that these new rules are going to seriously reduce generation capacity in this country, and is also going to make electricity much more expensive for those who can barely afford to pay their electric bill now.

wayne
December 27, 2011 12:57 am

I agree will most above ….. the bottom line….
The EPA, the US Environment Protection Agency has become a large net killer of citizens.
Defunding is in order, to shrink it back to it’s meaningful purpose. No more statistics. If no one can see harm, if no one reports harm, then there is no harm needing regulation. Eyes, not statistics. Same goes for harmless co2.

December 27, 2011 1:28 am

Is there any reference regarding the $4 billion funding by the EPA to advocacy groups over ten years?
I quoted it on another site and have been eating a lot of humble pie. It seems to be in error.
“… The President’s 2012 Budget includes $9 billion (for the EPA) … ”
They did spend US$0.68 billion in 2011 on R&D, maybe which was counted? It seems some of their budget is disbursed as ‘grants’ for projects, which apparently totalled $548 million in 2011. Training and awareness grants, fellowships and associated expenses only totalled $39 million in 2011.
Further:
“In the last 10 years, the EPA has given the ALA $20,405,655, according to EPA records.”
http://junkscience.com/2011/03/15/epa-owns-the-american-lung-association/
another “… the $5 million in funding it (ALA) takes from the EPA each year…”
And I saw approx only another US$20 million went to “small environmental advocacy groups” over 10 years…

Disko Troop
December 27, 2011 1:56 am

One of my earlier business ventures at the age of 12 was to recycle the mercury in all the broken thermometers kept in a bin in our school chemical lab. This involved a Bunsen burner, a fire proof glove and a beaker to collect the resulting expanding mercury. Sound science in times of high scrap mercury prices I think you’ll agree. The resulting explosion rendered the laboratory block unusable for a week and my backside covered by the imprint of a school cane for a similar time. However I was not poisoned and my mental accuity remains at the level of an earthworm to this day.

charles nelson
December 27, 2011 2:14 am

Many years ago I had a little radio production company in london .One morning I arrived at work to find the street sealed off as a specialist team in funny breathing apparatus and large tongs went through my office garbage.
I walked up to the spilt paper and picked up a letterhead.
The company was called RadioActivity.
The guy with the tongs asked did I have any radioactive materials in my garbage.
Undereath the radioactivity logo which was eighties postmodern…..were the words
Radio Production Services.
Three vehicles and a cop car.

dodgy geezer
December 27, 2011 2:32 am

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. Intense fires then release the mercury back into the atmosphere” (See http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/10/071017131817.htm )”
Umm? The original quote was “The mercury released by forest fires originally comes from industrial and natural sources….”. You simply removed the ‘..and natural sources..’ and then presented the quote as showing that the mercury only came from industrial sources.
This makes me disbelieve anything you say…

George Lawson
December 27, 2011 2:46 am

The greatest danger resulting from all these ridiculous so called scientific papers coming out from the Green movement and the AGW cult is the way that governments, especially in the USA and the UK, seem to accept the recommendations resulting from these flawed papers hook line and sinker, regardless of what detrimental effects ‘taking action’ might have on jobs and the economy. . Until we have governments that are prepared to take an open-minded approach and challenge the multitude of questionable papers screaming “We’ve got to do something no matter how much it costs and how much it injures our economy” then I’m afraid all seems to be lost,

William
December 27, 2011 2:48 am

The EPA coal fired power mercury regulation is a back handed method of increasing the cost of coal fired power to push green energy. As China is placing a new large coal fired power plant into service every week, total mercury exposure will not change as a result of the EPA regulations, as the EPA power regulations do not apply to China. The EPA power regulations also mandate a percentage of called green energy which is 2 to 3 times as expensive as coal if the cost of grid upgrades and standby gas fired power plants are included.
The consequence of the EPA power regulations is power costs in the US will double and the remaining manufacturing jobs will move to Asia. Greenpeace and World Wildlife’s goal appears to be to transform the US economy into a version of Spain (28% unemployment of youth) with massive boondoggle “green” energy schemes.
Enough is enough. We live in democracy. Let’s solve this EPA problem.

December 27, 2011 2:53 am

1. I noticed the following facts:
Coal-fired power plants were estimated in 1999 to emit about 48 tons per year, or over 40 percent of the U.S. inventory from anthropogenic sources. (Northeast States for Coordinated Air Use Management, 2003, p. 2-1).
In the United States, EPA promulgated a regulation in 2005 to reduce criteria air pollutant emissions from power plants, the Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR). The U.S. EPA calculated the estimated costs and some of the benefits of that regulation. The CAIR rule is primarily aimed at reducing emissions of SOx and NOx from large coal-fired power plants, but as a co-benefit will result in reductions of mercury emissions. The CAIR rule will achieve the majority of its mercury reductions as a co-benefit from controls for SO2. Applying SO2 controls (or other multi-pollutant approaches) are more cost-effective at reducing mercury than direct mercury control. The co-benefits of CAIR were estimated to reduce mercury emissions to 34.5 metric tonnes in 2010;
– EPA also promulgated the Clean Air Mercury Rule (CAMR) which was targeted to specifically further reduce mercury emissions from coal-fired power plants. The specific requirements of CAMR were estimated to further reduce mercury emissions to
13.6 tonnes by 2020. This could cost the U.S. electric power industry about US$ 11.3 billion. (UNEP, Report presenting the costs and benefits for each of the strategic objectives, 2008, p. 21)
2. Mercury is also found in nature but reducing the anthropogenic emission remains a commendable initiative. But is it advisable to make this investments if other countries make hardly any effort to reduce the emission of mercury? The estimated global anthropogenic emissions of mercury to air in 2005 was (UNEP, Technical Background Report to the Global Atmospheric Mercury, 2008, p. 40):
– 1,280 tons in Asia (i.e. mainly in China) (66.5%)
– 153 tons in North America (7.94%)
– 150 tons in Europe (7.78%)
So, without international agreements, the mercury content in the air will not change a lot.
3. EPA works with outdated figures to justify the use of CFLs. They use in their calculations the national average of mercury emissions due to the electricity production of 0.012 mg/kWh. Nowadays, when coal fired power plants emit still less mercury, it must be about 0.009 mg. In the long run, when virtually no mercury will be emitted by power plants, the mercury containing CFLs will still emit mercury. If they thought logically, they should ban without delay all CFLs, because mercury free alternatives are in plenty. It is incomprehensible that the government pays a high price (11 billion dollar) to reduce the mercury emission to air with several tons while the promotion of CFLs will bring yearly about 2 tons of mercury among the households and in landfills.

Myrrh
December 27, 2011 4:15 am

aired says:
December 26, 2011 at 8:23 pm
The relationship between selenium and mercury in the body has become understood only in the last decade. It is not so much that selenium protects developing nervous systems from mercury, although that is part of the story. The more important truth is that excess mercury ingestion can rob the selenium that is essential for nervous system function and development.
I’ve read that it’s the lack of selenium in the body that’s the problem. When selenium missing mercury makes the connections that selenium would be making which is what screws the body, enough selenium and the mercury has nowhere to connect and is thus expelled. One only needs enough selenium to let it do its thing, greater amounts of mercury will anyway be unable to make the connections which some mercury is making through lack of selenium, so gets expelled. I’ll see if I can find any more on this. Brazil nuts.

Bob Layson
December 27, 2011 5:19 am

Reducing mercury vapour usage PER LAMP does not equal less mecury vapour with a chance of entering the air because of the present, and future, much increased use and TOTAL NUMBER of such lamps.

December 27, 2011 5:19 am

“James Fosser says:
December 26, 2011 at 6:53 pm
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).”

A habitable planet orbiting ‘Alpha Centauri B’ you say? And you bought a ticket for you and your family? Interesting, I hadn’t heard about this plant so I checked the astronomy sites and NASA looking for the particulars. None found… There is a lot of speculation about the possibiity though.
Speculation, hmmm, sort of like the EPA speculation formulas for figuring hazards from specific sources while ignoring other sources.
If one were serious about living on a ‘new’ earth like planet, I would highly recommend looking for a solar system with a single sun. Suns with orbiting suns are likely to have highly disrupted orbiting bodies. Think frequent extinction events; our solar system is very orderly with minor disruptions of orbiting planetoids, asteroids and whatnot caused (thought to be) by a gas giant (jupiter). Your alpha centauri multi sun system will either be swept clean of orbiting bodies (unlikely) or will have multiple rings of orbiting bodies that are frequently affected by competing solar gravity fields.
But, you’ve already booked passage; got any room for other pro (re:disappointed) EPA governance passionates? Maybe get a group fare?
Have a nice trip! Since it takes so long to get there, I assume you’re flying (spacing?) soon?
Don’t worry about us, we’ll be fine as soon as we return (reduce) government back to governance rather than finding nebulous reasons for tyrannical micro managing our lives.