Monday, March 30, 2009

Kentucky environmental attorney Sanders says EPA fires up first Clean Air Act case against utilties skirting law by using older units without controls


Did you know that in February 2009, the United States filed a complaint against Westar Energy alleging that the company violated the Clean Air Act by making major modifications to the Jeffrey Energy Center, a coal-fired power plant in St. Marys, Kansas without also installing and operating modern pollution control equipment?

The complaint alleges that for more than a decade, the Jeffrey Energy Center has operated without the best available emissions-control technology required by the New Source Review provisions of the Clean Air Act to control emissions of sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide and particulate matter, contributing to formation of fine particulate matter, smog and acid rain.

The lawsuit, filed by the Justice Department on behalf of the EPA, asks the district court to order Westar Energy to install and operate appropriate air pollution control technology in order to substantially reduce sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide and particulate matter emissions from the Jeffrey Energy Center. The United States also seeks civil penalties up to the maximum amount authorized by law, as well as actions by the energy provider to mitigate the adverse effects alleged to have been caused by the violations.

The suit was filed in the U.S. District Court in Kansas City, Kansas. This lawsuit marks the potential end of utilities skirting various sections of the Clean Air Act by using older units without modern air pollution controls. Instead, of operating old, inefficient units without air pollution control equipment, utilties will soon be forced to upgrade these old units or shut them down.