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Coal Power Projects On Hold Over CO2

by:   |  The Associated Press

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A coal power plant in central Utah. When the EPA appeals panel rejected a federal permit for a Utah plant, the fate of scores of new coal-burning power plants went into limbo. (Photo: Nathan W. Armes / Sipa Press / NEWSCOM)

    Industry lawyer calls it "a punt to the Obama administration."

    Washington - The fate of scores of new coal-burning power plants is now in limbo over whether to regulate heat-trapping greenhouse gases.

    The uncertainty resulted when an Environmental Protection Agency appeals panel on Thursday rejected a federal permit for a Utah plant, leaving the issue for the Obama administration to resolve.

    The panel said 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 leading pollutant linked to global warming.

    The matter was sent back to that office, which must better explain why it failed to order limits on carbon dioxide. This is "an issue of national scope that has implications far beyond this individual permitting process," the panel said.

    EPA spokesman Jonathan Shrader said the agency was reviewing the ruling by the appeals panel, which traditionally gives great deference to agency decisions.

    Environmentalists and lawyers representing industry groups said the ruling puts in question permits - some being considered, others approved but under appeal - of perhaps as many as 100 coal plants.

    "It's going to stop everything while EPA mulls over what to do next" about how the federal Clean Air Act is to be used to control carbon dioxide, said David Bookbinder, a Sierra Club lawyer. "And that will be decided by the next administration."

    Bookbinder led the group's efforts to block the attempt by Deseret Power, a group of six electric cooperatives, to build a second coal-burning generating unit at the Bonanza facility on the Uintah and Ouray Indian reservation in Utah.

    Deseret Power, had no comment about the EPA developments.

    "In essence this is a punt to the Obama administration.... All permits in the pipeline are now stymied," said Jason Hutt, a lawyer who represents a number of utilities, merchant energy developers and refineries seeking permits. He said it also would affect permits for oil refinery expansion.

    President George W. Bush has made clear that he believes the Clean Air Act should not be used in permitting new plants to control greenhouse gases. It is not clear how the Obama administration will address regulating carbon dioxide. The Supreme Court has told the EPA it must decide on whether carbon dioxide endangers public health and welfare, and if it does it must be regulated.

    Michael Gerrard, a lawyer not involved in the Bonanza case and author of "Global Climate Change and the Law," said the decision "will embolden the lawsuits" challenging construction of new power plants based on their impact on climate.

    "It means that the appeals board recognizes that carbon dioxide regulation of power plants is a very live and open issue. It does not ban them. It puts a cloud over them, by making it clear that this is a real issue," Gerrard said in an interview.

    The Utah case has attracted wide interest because of its broader implications.

    Among those filing legal papers with the EPA's appeals panel, arguing the permit should be upheld, were the American Petroleum Institute, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the American Chemistry Council and the National Association of Manufacturers.

  

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This is really good news for

This is really good news for the air we breath-I hope! YEs we all need power but coal burning plants are no longer the answer, at least not the way they have been constructed and implemented in the past!

I hope the environmental

I hope the environmental groups are piling on with Amicus filings to counter the oil, coal and other industries plumping for this to be overturned. Obama has talked about "clean coal." Well, here's the issue, and his administration will have to deal with it. I'd invest in CO2 capture technology, if I had the money.

Carbon capture and

Carbon capture and sequestration requires a 50% increase in energy consumption. Read 50% more coal burned to capture the CO2 at the plant. This does not include compression, transport or injection. The pipelines do not exist..... and they want to use the CO2 to extract - more oil and gas......

The term "cleann coal" is

The term "cleann coal" is about as oxymoronic as "surgical warfare". When something organic is burned, for whatever purpose, CO2 is produced. Unless it is captured at the source, it finds its way into our atmosphere. Coal, oil, natural gas, wood... it's just a matter of degrees. Anyone who thinks we can keep on burning things (even at the present rate) is helping destroy the future of the planet. This issue should have been squarely faced at the drafting of the Kyoto Accords, but America has already procrastinated too long. Talk about a "bailout", there's money to be made on the future of clean world energy, the greatest of all bailouts!

no matter what the US

no matter what the US does/doesn't about all this matters little to none. China, India, etc are not going to halt coal plants for a long, long time. As far as I'm concerned, the science is fuzzy at best regarding CO2. No one would argue about pollution...the plants must be clean...but CO2? I think the cart is in front of the horse on this one. The one thing I am certain of is that all this fooling around and government meddling is going to cost the citizens a lot.

Unfortunately we just can't

Unfortunately we just can't stop building new coal-fired planr just yet. There will be more strickt regulations on emissions which will all be paid by consumers. About China; some 1 million chinese die yearly respiratory diseases caused by pollusion from their 1950's soviet tech coal fired power plants. The demand that changes chinese environmental policy will come from inside not outside from China.