Sierra Club win freezes coal plant permitting, forces EPA to consider CO2 emissions
November 16th, 2008 by Jim JustThe Sierra Club won a stunning legal victory Thursday (November 13), blocking the Environmental Protection Agency from issuing a permit for a proposed coal-burning power plant in Utah without addressing global warming impacts. The EPA Environmental Appeals Board held that the EPA’s Denver office failed to adequately support its decision to issue a permit for the Bonanza plant without requiring controls on carbon dioxide.
The decision may well stop all new coal plant permitting while the EPA rethinks how the Clean Air Act is to be used to control carbon dioxide. That won’t happen until after the next administration takes office. In the meantime, all permits in the pipeline are stymied. The decision could affect permits for oil refinery expansion as well.
The Sierra Club argued that the EPA’s permit decision violated CAA sections 165(a)(4) and 169(3) by failing to apply “BACT,” or best available control technology, to limit carbon dioxide (“CO2”) emissions from the facility. The argument rested on the Supreme Court’s decision in Massachusetts v. EPA, in which the court ruled that CO2 is an “air pollutant” under the Clean Air Act. The Board remanded the permit for the EPA to reconsider whether to impose a CO2 BACT limit and to develop an adequate record for its decision.
A copy of the decision can be found here.
The significance of the Deseret Power Electric Cooperative decision cannot be overstated. As Joseph Romm reiterates at Climate Progress, the single most important policy measure the rich nations must embrace as soon as possible is to stop building coal plants without carbon sequestration. This ruling will accomplish that in the U.S., at least for a while – and it could give the Obama administration the opportunity to get serious climate legislation passed, which is crucial to getting serious international action on climate.
We’re going to have to replace all of the world’s existing coal plants with either CCS plants or zero carbon alternatives – and sooner rather than later – if we’re to get atmospheric CO2 back down to the 350 ppm necessary to minimize the risk of runaway global warming.
The Sierra Club’s press release is below the fold. Read the rest of this entry »