Friday, December 31, 2010
James Fallows Promotes Clean Coal in the Atlantic
You don't have to believe that global warming is an imminent threat, or believe the prognostications of Michael Mann, the discredited originator of the hockey stick graph, to appreciate the courage that Mr. Fallows demonstrates in facing the fact that the need for energy is going to require us to burn fossil fuels for quite a while longer.
How to Change the Global Energy Conversation
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
West Virginai Ban on Consumer Electronics in Landfills Begins January 1
During the 2010 legislative session, Senate Bill 398 passed into law. The bill bans certain electronics from West Virginia landfills. The bill requires the WV Solid Waste Management Board to design a program for the proper handling of covered electronic devices (CEDs). The Secretary of the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) is required to promulgate rules for the implementation of the enforcement of the program.
CEDs include televisions, computers or video display devices with a screen that is greater than four inches measured diagonally. "Covered electronic device" does not include a video display device that is part of a motor vehicle, or that is contained within a household appliance or commercial, industrial or medical equipment.
Here is a blog from the National Center for Electronics Recycling on the ban.
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Toxic Emissions Decrease Significantly in West Virginia
Follansbee School Air Safe
PHILADELPHIA (Dec. 23, 2010) – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency made available today its final report on monitoring for air toxics near the Follansbee Middle School and Jefferson Primary School in Follansbee, W. Va. The report, posted on the agency’s website at http://www.epa.gov/schoolair/schools.html, concludes that outdoor levels of manganese near the schools were below levels that would raise health concerns. However, the agency will conduct more monitoring next spring for pollutants commonly associated with coke oven plants, since one is operating in the vicinity of the schools.
EPA’s monitoring of outdoor air found several pollutants common in coke oven emissions, including benzene, arsenic and benzo(a)pyrene. The additional monitoring will help EPA gain a better understanding of the levels of pollutants in the air and whether there are potential health concerns associated with the mixture of pollutants. The need for follow-up air monitoring is also based on the knowledge that one of the main sources of air toxics in the area was not operating at normal production levels during the original monitoring. The facility is now operating at normal production.
As part of EPA’s Schools Air Toxics Monitoring initiative, outdoor air was monitored at 63 schools in 22 states. The study was designed to help EPA and state environmental agencies understand whether long-term exposure to air toxics poses health concerns for children and staff at the schools.
EPA selected the Follansbee schools because of their proximity to air toxics sources, and based on computer models that indicated these toxics may be present at elevated levels in the outdoor air. To see a listing of all of the schools monitored in this initiative: http://www.epa.gov/schoolair/schools.html.
Tuesday, December 21, 2010
DEP, DNR to Recycle Christmas Trees
In an effort to keep discarded Christmas trees out of landfills and off the sides of roads, the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection and the state Division of Natural Resources are sponsoring their sixth annual tree recycling event in 2011.
On Jan. 8, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., the DEP’s Rehabilitation Environmental Action Plan (REAP) will accept used live Christmas trees at the Capitol Market in downtown Charleston. The DNR will use the collected trees to create fish habitats at the bottom of lakes and streams throughout West Virginia.
REAP’s Sandy Rogers said the recycling event gets bigger every year in terms of the number of trees collected after the holidays. Last year, close to 450 trees were dropped off at the Capitol Market.
Those who donate trees will receive a free gift and can register for more prizes, including West Virginia skiing trips. For more information, contact Rogers at 304-926- 0499, ext. 1004 or email Sandra.D.Rogers@wv.gov.
Friday, December 17, 2010
Light Emitting Diodes Are Hazardous Wastes When Disposed?
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
WV Environmental Quality Board To Decide Hearing Key Water Quality Question
The WV DEP responded with its own interpretation of its narrative standards. Presumably it should be given greater weight than EPA's guidance, since West Virginia is responsible for its own NPDES permit program under the Clean Water Act.
The following report came from the Charleston Gazette:
CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Environmentalists and state regulators faced off Tuesday in the start of a major permit appeal hearing that puts the spotlight squarely on West Virginia's opposition to a federal crackdown aimed at reducing strip-mine pollution across the Appalachian coalfields.
Department of Environmental Protection officials sought an 11th-hour ruling Monday night to block any mention in the hearing of tougher new water quality guidelines issued by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency earlier this year.
State Environmental Quality Board members turned down that request, and citizen group lawyers told the board the case is all about DEP's rejection of the EPA guidelines and a growing body of science they are based upon.
"DEP refuses to follow the law and the science when it issues permits for surface coal mines," said Joe Lovett, director of the Appalachian Center for the Economy and the Environment. "The permit at issue here is a prime example of DEP's recalcitrance."
Lovett's organization is working with the Sierra Club to appeal a DEP-issued permit for Scott Depot-based International Coal Group to expand a mining operation along Scotts Run near Cassville in Monongalia County.
ICG subsidiary Patriot Mining's New Hill West Mine would cover about 225 acres, and discharge pollution under a modification to an existing Clean Water Act permit that covers five other adjacent mine sites. In its appeal, the Sierra Club argued that DEP wrongly did not perform detailed studies of the mine's potential water quality impacts, and ignored the need for specific water discharge limits for electrical conductivity, total dissolved solids and sulfates.
Bob McLusky, a Jackson Kelley lawyer representing the company, argued that Patriot Mining's permit -- currently suspended by the board pending the appeal -- is "small potatoes" and not the Sierra Club's real target.
"They're not in this because of 225 acres," McLusky said. "They see this as a referendum on mining. Patriot sees itself caught up in a much larger issue."
Board members set aside four full days this week for the hearing. Expert witnesses for the Sierra Club will include biologists Margaret Palmer of the University of Maryland and Emily Bernhardt of Duke University, two of the authors of a study earlier this year in the prestigious journal Science, which concluded mountaintop removal's damaging impacts are "pervasive and irreversible."
Palmer testified Tuesday afternoon that peer-reviewed scientific literature clearly shows adverse water quality impacts downstream from coal-mining operations.
"There have been a lot of studies that have shown a pretty clear relationship between mining and stream impairment," Palmer told board members. "There are a lot of papers."
Since soon after taking office, the Obama administration has been citing that scientific consensus in putting strip-mining permits under much greater scrutiny. EPA has issued new guidance and a landmark science paper detailing how increased conductivity from mining pollution is harming aquatic life.
Environmental scientist Evan Hansen of the Morgantown firm Downstream Strategies, another expert for the Sierra Club, testified Tuesday morning that Scotts Run already shows signs of aquatic life impairment from sulfates and increased conductivity.
The situation could be made even worse, Hansen said, by Patriot Mining's plan to dispose of coal ash from the Morgantown Energy Associates power plant as part of the site's reclamation plan. Hansen conceded that coal ash's alkalinity can be of some help in reducing acid mine drainage from past and current mining in the area, but testified that DEP has not considered the potential long-term implications, such as more concentrated selenium runoff from the mine.
In part, the permit appeal focuses attention on a legal dispute over West Virginia's "narrative" water quality standard.
Unlike "numeric" water quality rules, the narrative standard itself does not specifically include numeric limits on allowable pollution. Instead, the narrative standard simply outlaws any condition that "adversely alters the integrity" of state waters or causes a "significant adverse impact to the chemical, physical, hydrologic, or biological components of aquatic ecosystems."
As part of its mountaintop removal crackdown, EPA issued guidance intended to better define the narrative standard by putting numbers on what constitutes significant adverse impacts on
DEP lawyer Jennifer Hughes argued that her agency has issued its own guidance for the state's narrative standard and that therefore the EPA's guidelines are not legally relevant here. Hughes repeatedly objected to questions and testimony about the EPA guidelines.
"Science informs policy decisions, it doesn't dictate them," Hughes said. "It is the DEP's responsibility to make those policy decisions."
Hughes said that the EPA is seeking to force "unobtainable limits" on West Virginia's mining industry, and McLusky repeated the coal lobby's belief that EPA is putting the health of aquatic insects over the economy of the region.
But Palmer testified that DEP's own water quality guidance does not properly take into account the important functions of aquatic insects that provide food and energy that is vital to the overall health of streams, fish and birds. Changing the number and type of insects can have broader impacts, she said.
"When you shift the makeup of a community, that can cause many changes in ecological processes," Palmer told the board.
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
EPA Asks For More Time To Reconsider Boiler MACT
WASHINGTON – In a motion filed today in the federal District Court for the District of Columbia, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is seeking an extension in the current court-ordered schedule for issuing rules that would reduce harmful air emissions from large and small boilers and solid waste incinerators. The additional time is needed for the agency to re-propose the rules based on a full assessment of information received since the rules were proposed. The rules would cut emissions of harmful pollutants, including mercury and soot, which cause a range of health effects – from developmental disabilities in children to cancer, heart disease and premature death.
"After receiving additional data through the extensive public comment period, EPA is requesting more time to develop these important rules," said Gina McCarthy, assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation. "We want to ensure these rules are practical to implement and protect all Americans from dangerous pollutants such as mercury and soot, which affect kids' development, aggravate asthma and cause heart attacks."
In order to meet a court order requiring the EPA to issue final rules in January 2011, the agency proposed standards in April 2010. While EPA requested and received some information from industry before the proposal, the comments EPA received following the proposal shed new light on a number of key areas, including the scope and coverage of the rules and the way to categorize the various boiler-types. Industry groups and others offered this information during the public comment period after EPA proposed the rule. After reviewing the data and the more than 4,800 public comments, the agency believes it is appropriate to issue a revised proposal that reflects the new data and allows for additional public comment. This approach is essential to meeting the agency’s legal obligations under the Clean Air Act and, as a result, provides the surest path to protecting human health and the environment.
EPA has estimated that there are more than 200,000 boilers operating in industrial facilities, commercial buildings, hotels and universities located in highly populated areas and communities across the country. EPA has estimated that for every $5 spent on reducing these pollutants, the public will see $12 in health and other benefits.
EPA is under a current court order to issue final rules on January 16, 2011 and is seeking in its motion to the court to extend the schedule to finalize the rules by April 2012.
More information: http://www.epa.gov/airquality/combustion
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
US Supreme Court to Hear Climate Change Nuisance Case
Via the blog of the Supreme Court of the United States comes the news that the court will hear the appeal by five businesses that have been sued under the law of common nuisance for emitting carbon.This is, of course, the lawsuit brought by several northeastern states against TVA and other power generators alleging that they should be held accountable for the emission of greenhouse gases that allegedly contribute to climate change. This is one report, of the Supreme Court's action yesterday, and I'm sure there are others. It is worth noting that the Second Circuit's decision conflicts with the Fourth Circuit's decison in a case brought by North Carolina that such emissions are not public nusiances. Here is the New York Times take on that case.
five entities that were claimed to be the largest sources of greenhouse gases — four electric power companies and the Tennessee Valley Authority — were sued by eight states, New York City, and three land conservation groups. Their lawsuits were filed under the federal common law of nuisance, a judge-made theory. The Second Circuit agreed that the lawsuit could proceed on that theory. The case, however, has not yet gone to trial.
When the electric generating companies appealed to the Supreme Court, the Justice Department, speaking for TVA, urged the Supreme Court to send the case back to the Circuit Court for another look instead of ruling on it now. The Department argued that the EPA was now moving on several fronts to regulate greenhouses gases under the Clean Air Act, so this activity might displace any claims made under common-law theories. The Court, however, chose on Monday to take on the case itself at this point, presumably with the aim of deciding whether such a nuisance lawsuit may now go forward as a way of attacking global warming.
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
EPA Announces New Rules to Govern Carbon Capture and Sequestration
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
West Virginia DEP Announces Mandatory Electronic Permitting and Reporting for Water Permits
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Fourth Circuit Upholds Decision Requiring DEP to Issue NPDES Permits to Itself
The Court was unpersuaded by arguments that requiring the DEP to obtain permits from itself was contrary to the intent of the Clean Water Act, or that enforcing against itself was a practical impossibility.("WVDEP") appeals an injunction requiring it to obtainNational Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permitsunder the Clean Water Act ("CWA"),see 33 U.S.C. § 1342et seq.The injunction was based on the district court’s conclusionthat the plain language of the CWA and applicable EPA regulationsrequire such a permit.The trial court’s ruling was correct. The text of the CWA,as well as the corresponding regulations issued by the EnvironmentalProtection Agency, confirm that the permit requirementsapply to anyone who discharges pollutants into thewaters of the United States. Under the CWA, it does not matterthat a mining company may have created the conditions, for reclamation efforts at abandoned coal mining sites.that call for reclamation. What matters is that an entity, privateor public, is currently discharging pollutants into thewaters of the United States. In fact, the statute contains noexceptions for state agencies engaging in reclamation efforts;to the contrary, it explicitly includes them within its scope.At bottom, WVDEP’s arguments stem from little more thanpolicy disagreements with the statutory text. Finding that tobe an insufficient basis for deviating from the law as written,we affirm the judgment of the district court.
The decision can be found here. A story on the decision can be found in the AP report in the Gazettte
Saturday, November 6, 2010
DEP Proposes Certification for Water Quality Samplers
A discussion regarding the certification of samplers first began within a committee formed by the WVDEP in 1995, formed to discuss certification of laboratories performing analytical work for statutory programs within the purview of the WVDEP. The results of the meetings during 1995 resulted in legislation establishing the laboratory certification program; however, the field sampler certification program was dropped from consideration. Again in February 2003 the WVDEP sponsored another meeting to discuss a sampler certification program. The meeting again failed to gain support for the program and the issue has remained dormant until announcement of this recently scheduled meeting.
According to Dan Arnold, the certification of field samplers would assist in removing questions regarding the collection and handling of samples. The program envisioned would provide standardized procedures for sampling in accordance with professional standards that includes documentation of the sample collection. The goal is to obtain more accurate data being reported by the laboratories and result in better decisions regarding each site. Mr. Arnold pointed out that the adjoining states of Pennsylvania and Virginia are working on some component of a field sampler certification program.
If a program for certification would be developed by the WVDEP, a certification would be required for each type of sampling, such as: monitoring wells, surface water, soil, soil gas, air, etc.
EPA Discusses Chesapeake Bay Restoration Plans for West Virginia
Thursday, November 4, 2010
WV Supreme Court Affirms Rights of Mineral Owners
On November 3, 2010, the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals released its opinion in Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation, et al. v. Randy Huffman, et al., Nos. 35508, 35509, 35510 and 35511 (November 3, 2010) (per curiam), affirming the ruling of the Circuit Court of Logan County, which overruled the DEP’s denial of well work permit applications filed by Cabot for drilling within the confines of Chief Logan State Park.
The Court held that a 1960 deed from the mineral owner, the Lawson Heirs, Inc., was clear and unambiguous in reserving to the Lawson Heirs the right to produce oil and gas in the future. The Court further held that a 1961 statute enacted by the West Virginia Legislature which prohibited the Director of the DNR from allowing the “exploitation of minerals” within state parks had no preclusive effect upon the requested permits and thus the DNR and the DEP did not have the authority to prevent the Lawson Heirs, and their lessee, Cabot, from locating wells within the State park. The Court also rejected arguments by several environmental groups that Cabot would be prohibited from drilling in the park because federal funds had been allocated by the Department of Interior for the park, and federal law prohibited the use of the lands for anything other than public outdoor recreation uses. The Court upheld the sanctity of deeds and written contracts reserving surface uses to the mineral owner.
The opinion is an important one for mineral owners and lessees who hold reserved mineral estates under public lands. A full copy of the opinion can be obtained from the West Virginia Supreme Court’s website (http://www.state.wv.us/wvsca/Fall2010.htm). Cabot was represented by Timothy M. Miller of Robinson & McElwee. For more information, contact Timothy M. Miller at 304-347-8336, or tmm@ramlaw.com.
Saturday, October 30, 2010
West Virginia A Geothermal Hotspot?
Any renewable resource that holds the promise for reliable, base load electrical supply is welcome. The wells would have to be fairly deep, but there's a great deal of knowledge of well drilling in the state, thanks to the presence of an innovative oil and gas industry. I'll look forward to hearing more about this.
Monday, October 18, 2010
ORSANCO Passses on TDS Criterion; Adopts Variance From Mixing Zone Prohibition
The Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Compact (ORSANCO) has approved changes to its Pollution Control Standards at a meeting held late last week. They include specification of design flows to be used for setting permit limits to protect human health criteria (the 7Q10 for noncarcinogens; the harmonic mean flow for carcinogens), and a provision to allow consideration of variances to mixing zone requirements. This latter was in response to requests by industry for relief from ORSANCO’s prohibition of mixing zones for bioaccumulatives, such as mercury, which resulted in discharge limits that were more stringent than could be met with current technology.
The proposed adoption of a total dissolved solids criterion of 500 ppm was deferred until additional information on occurrence and sources can be obtained. That matter will be reconsidered at the Commission’s February meeting.
You can see a press release from ORSANCO at http://www.orsanco.org/images/stories/files/pressreleases/2010standardsrelease.pdf
Monday, October 11, 2010
Environmental Groups File Citizen Suit Against Fola Coal
(Charleston, WV) –Prompted by stream pollution from the Fola Coal Company’s Surface Mine No. 3 in Nicholas and Clay counties, the Sierra Club and West Virginia Highlands Conservancy today filed an enforcement action against the company in federal court. Water quality tests conducted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection, and the company itself have shown that the waters immediately below the mine are significantly degraded. These studies reveal that Twenty Mile Creek and Boardtree Branch, both of which receive waste discharges from the 1700-acre surface mine, are biologically impaired and toxic to aquatic life.
Judge Rules on Definition of Deep Well
Shallow wells are those that are drilled no further than 20 feet into the top of the Onondaga formation. (The 20 feet is needed to drill the "rat tail" and complete the well, but no gas can be produced in the Onondaga.) The dividing line between deep and shallow wells never was much of an issue until development of the Marcellus Shale, which lies directly on top of the Onondaga formation. Drilling of horizontal wells in the Marcellus is preceded by a vertical well and a rat tail that usually goes more than 20 feet into the Onondaga. The Onondaga isn't produced, and after the rat tail is logged out it can be filled with cement.
The question arose as to whether a well drilled more than 20 feet into the Onondaga is a deep well, and subject to deep well spacing, or a shallow well. The issue was originally taken to Supreme Court on a writ of prohibition, which sent it to Judge Murensky in McDowell County. Judge Murensky went with a strict interpretation of the statute and said that if a well went more than 20 feet into the Onondaga it is a deep well, even if only the formations above the Onondaga is produced. You can see his opinion here.
An effort was made during the last Legislative session to change the definition to allow drilling into the Onondaga without converting the well to a deep well. A similar effort may be made in 2011.
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Manchin Announces Lawsuit Against EPA, Corps Over Coal Mining Policies
Gov. Manchin is in an unusual position. He remains very popular in West Virginia, where he has done an excellent job as governor. In fact, the Republicans are running ads praising his work as governor, suggesting he should stay in the state to continue that work. I've heard a number of people say the same thing - the state could keep a good governor, and send a vote against Pres. Obama to the Senate in the form of Manchin's opponent, John Raese. Who would have thought that a popular governor would be defeated because he was too good? This lawsuit may be part of the Manchin counterattack, to show he wouldn't be an Obama yes-man, but to be fair it can't be solely a political ploy, as it was being discussed in the state before Sen. Byrd even died.
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Secretary Huffman Appoints Task Force To Study Marcellus Drilling
Marcellus Shale is a hot topic in West Virginia, but not quite the battleground that it is in Pennsylvania. There they have had total dissolved solids problems in some state streams, somerimes as a result of drillling activities, but TDS from drilling activities hasn't been a problem in West Virginia, because discharges of produced water to state streams is generally forbidden.
Saturday, September 25, 2010
EPA Issues Draft Chesapeake Bay ‘Pollution Diet’
(
The draft TMDL -- which EPA is legally required to produce – sets limits on the amount of nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment pollution discharged into the Bay and each of its tributaries by different types of pollution sources. It is designed to meet water quality standards that reflect a scientific assessment of the pollution reductions necessary to restore the health of the Bay ecosystem. The draft TMDL calls for 25 percent reductions in nitrogen and phosphorus and at least a 16 percent reduction in sediment to achieve a healthy Bay and local rivers. These reductions, which the science indicates are necessary to achieve a healthy watershed, would be achieved by a combination of federal and state actions.
Development of the draft TMDL followed careful EPA review of pollution reduction measures proposed by the States and the
As a result, the draft TMDL allocations released today reflect a combination of defined state commitments and supplemental EPA measures which tighten controls on permitted “point sources” of pollution, such as wastewater treatment plants, large animal agriculture operations and municipal stormwater systems.
EPA will now work with federal partners like the Department of Agriculture, to assist Bay watershed states and the
“While EPA felt that the plans submitted by Maryland and the District of Columbia represented a strong start, others still contained gaps that reduced EPA’s confidence that the State could achieve all the pollutant reductions necessary to meet its contribution to Bay restoration,” said EPA Regional Administrator Shawn M. Garvin,. “We are hopeful that the jurisdictions will provide a greater level of assurance in their final plans, so that EPA can reduce the federal measures in the final TMDL. EPA strongly prefers to achieve the necessary pollution reductions through the state plans rather than federal actions because the states have more flexibility and can achieve reductions from a wider range of sources than EPA.”
The Draft TMDL which contains evaluations of the plans and EPA adjustments for all seven jurisdictions can be found at http://www.epa.gov/chesapeakebaytmdl.
The release of the draft TMDL begins a 45-day public comment period that will include 18 public meetings in all six watershed states (
The TMDL is designed to ensure that all pollution control measures to fully restore the Bay and its tidal rivers are in place by 2025, with 60 percent of the actions completed by 2017. The final TMDL will be established December 31.
On July 1, EPA set draft Bay-wide limits for nitrogen and phosphorus at 187.4 million and 12.5 million pounds per year, respectively, and on Aug. 13 set a range of allowable sediment pollution levels at between 6.1 and 6.7 billion pounds per year. These Bay-wide pollution limits were further divided by jurisdiction and major river basin based on state-of-the-art modeling tools, extensive monitoring data, peer-reviewed science, and close interaction with state partners.
The TMDL is supported by accountability measures to ensure cleanup commitments are met, including short-and long-term benchmarks, a tracking and accounting system, and additional federal actions, if necessary, to spur progress. It will build on state programs already in place, some of which are helping reduce pollution and improve the Bay’s health – for instance, Maryland reported a record sign-up this fall for one of its most successful agricultural pollution control programs, achieving more than 150% of its two-year goal for the Chesapeake Bay.
The TMDL was prompted by insufficient restoration progress over the last several decades in the Bay. The TMDL is required under federal law and responds to consent decrees in Virginia and D.C. dating back to the late 1990s. It is also a keystone commitment of a federal strategy to meet President Obama’s Executive Order to restore and protect the Bay.
Thursday, September 23, 2010
West Virginia DEP Continues Work on Long Term Brownfields Maintenance Program
In order to provide for long term closure obligations, the DEP is establishing a program to carry out long term maintenance. Here's a fact sheet explaining the process, which opens with the following explanation of the program:
In February 2009, the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP) established the WV Institutional Controls Focus Group (IC Focus Group) to provide an independent perspective to WVDEP about the feasibility of utilizing a public-private land stewardship program for the long-term safeguarding of remediated sites using institutional controls (ICs) and engineering controls (ECs) (collectively, IECs) to ensure that the remedy remains protective of human health and the environment. . .
The primary outcomes of this initiative will be recommendations and pre-implementation activities concerning the structure and operation of the voluntary land stewardship program. To date, this effort has resulted in an agreed organizational structure, site acceptance criteria and procedures, model agreements, as well as approaches to inspection, monitoring, reporting and notice.
Beginning later this year, several pilot projects will be conducted to demonstrate, strengthen and refine the proposed program. The pilot sites include sites from the State Voluntary Remediation Program (VRP) and completing corrective-action under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). In addition, financial analysis will be conducted to ensure the design of a viable entity with the necessary safeguards and standards needed for a permanent perpetual-care solution. Approximately a year after the pilots are implemented, the voluntary land stewardship program will begin to offer its services to the public and will accept additional sites into the program. The program will be available for sites with IECs remediated or closed under any federal or State environmental or remediation program, including brownfields, underground storage tanks, landfill closures, open dumps, hazardous waste sites, or sites with ongoing water treatment as part of mine reclamation efforts. More detailed information is available in the WV Institutional Controls Focus Group Interim Report dated September 9, 2010.
Thanks to Rob Lannan of Robinson & McElwee and others who worked on this process.
WVU Participates in EPA Sustainability Initiative
in Regional Sustainability Initiative
MORGANTOWN, W. Va. - - September 21, 2010 Today, West Virginia University became the latest organization to join the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Sustainability Partnership Program (SPP) in a signing ceremony held at the University President’s Office. EPA Regional Administrator Shawn M. Garvin joined Cabinet Secretary Randy Huffman of the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP) in recognizing West Virginia University (WVU).
University President James P. Clements signed the agreement on behalf of the school, formalizing the new working partnership.
“WVU has already taken many progressive steps to reduce the overall environmental footprint of the campus, and EPA is pleased to support and further those efforts” said EPA mid-Atlantic Regional Administrator, Shawn M. Garvin. “Through our partnership we expect that both sides will benefit as we build on current successes and then share those practices with other colleges and organizations.”
The Sustainability Partnership is an innovative program developed by EPA’s mid-Atlantic region to create a one-stop shopping approach for organizations that use large quantities of energy, water, and natural resources and want to go green. Instead of dealing with each of EPA's voluntary programs individually, EPA staff will work out a comprehensive ‘green’ plan for organizations that often saves money and makes good business sense. The overall goal of the SPP is to minimize the use of energy, resources and waste generation in the mid-Atlantic states.
The centerpiece of
Following this project, the university is expected to reach a carbon dioxide emission level that is 31.5 percent less than a typical educational complex its size.
"We are pleased to partner with the EPA as part of our commitment to a sustainable campus," said WVU President James P. Clements. "We have integrated sustainability practices throughout the University - from buildings to our transportation systems, to the cleaning products we use. I would like to thank Clement Solomon, WVU's director of sustainability, and all those throughout the University who demonstrate this commitment daily."
The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection has entered into an agreement with EPA and is helping to promote the SPP throughout the state.
“It is a great day for
Business Groups Challenge Greenhouse Gas Regulation
Business groups had no alternative but to seek a stay given the ramifications of EPA embarking on this regulatory path. Typically, you would ask to stay the effectiveness of a specific rule. However, delaying the legal effectiveness of the Tailoring Rule would arguably subject all businesses to the ridiculously low permitting thresholds 100/250 tons in the Clean Air Act.
As result, business group are challenge the very premise the EPA had to enact the Tailoring Rule because otherwise the 100/250 ton thresholds would take effect after enactment of the vehicle tailpipe rule.
This type of lawsuit, and similar challenges to EPA's Endangerment Finding (that CO2 presents a danger) and Tailoring Rule (explaining how EPA will regulate GHGs), as well as environmentalists' challenge to EPA's decision to ignore the 100/250 ton threshold for regulation of GHGs that would otherwise be required by the Clean Air Act, are all pending before courts. Some of them will likely rule one way or the other on stay requests before the end of the year, before the Tailoring Rule goes into effect.
Monday, September 20, 2010
National Mining Association Sues EPA Over Water Guidance
Saturday, September 18, 2010
DEP and Marshall Sponsor Sustainable Schools Summit
Marshall University, in partnership with the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection, will present the 2010 Sustainable Schools West Virginia Summit April 10-11, 2011.
The previously scheduled summit was moved due to scheduling conflicts.
The free event is designed to bring together educational leaders in elementary, secondary and higher education – both public and private – to discuss the important roles schools, colleges and universities have in creating sustainable campuses across West Virginia. The summit will take place on Marshall’s Huntington campus and is open to public and private higher education, as well as public and private K-12 schools.
Online registration is available at
http://apps.dep.wv.gov/registration. An agenda is also available at this site.
The summit is presented in concert and partnership with the WVDEP, Marshall University’s Sustainability Department, State Electric Supply Company, and ZMM, Inc.
For information, contact MU Sustainability Manager Margie Phillips at philli10@marshall.edu or 304-696-2992.
Internal Combustion Engines Here to Stay
On the other hand, some new, brilliant ideas have to be shelved when they just turn out to be impractical. Say goodbye to the compressed air car, which could never overcome its efficiency problems, or difficulties with low temperature exhaust.
WVMA Comments on Boiler Rule MACT
Thanks to Anne Blankenship, who drafted the letter and forwarded it to me.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Obama Administration Opposes Nuisance Suit Against Utilities
There have been a number of lawsuits by entities (Inuit villages, states, coastal communities) seeking damages from corporations they believe are harming them by contributing to global warming. Global warming and, more importantly, its alleged harmful effects, are gospel among true believers, but it would be interesting to see whether the science holds up if it is subjected to the sort of scrutiny that would occur in a court of law.
Thursday, September 9, 2010
WV DEP Expands Environmental Advocate Office
The Department of Environmental Protection has expanded its Office of the Environmental Advocate with the addition of two staff members.
“I wanted to expand the office because the citizens of West Virginia have an increased interest and awareness of environmental issues and we want to be responsive to their need for information and involvement,” said DEP Cabinet Secretary Randy C. Huffman.
Dennis Stottlemyer and John King joined the staff Sept. 1, and will assist Pam Nixon, who has been the sole environmental advocate since she joined the agency in November 1998. The Office of the Environmental Advocate has been in existence since the establishment of the DEP in 1992. This is the first time in the office’s 18 years of operation that is has been expanded.
Stottlemyer will be located in the Charleston office and King will work out of the Fairmont office. Huffman said their role will be to interact with individual citizens in the state, as well as work with community organizations and citizen’s groups
“Their main focus will be to close the gap between the agency and the citizens of the state,” Huffman said.
Stottlemyer is a 1995 graduate of West Virginia University, with a bachelor’s of science degree in environmental protection. Prior to being selected for this position, he was mitigation coordinator for the DEP’s Division of Mining and Reclamation. He also served as an executive assistant to the cabinet secretary for the DEP and was an environmental consultant prior to joining the agency. He is a member of the Davis Creek and Coal River watershed associations.
King earned a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice in 2002, and a master’s degree in physical science in 2007 from Marshall University. His experience includes being an inspector with the DEP’s Division of Water and Waste Management, and a regional coordinator for the Youth Environmental Program. He is also a member of the DEP’s dive team, and a founding member of the Morris Creek Watershed Association.
“This addition will allow DEP to reach more of its citizens,” Nixon said. “When it was just me, no matter how hard I tried, I was never able to address everyone’s concerns and issues. Now, DEP will be better able to meet with and communicate with more of West Virginia’s citizens.”
To reach the Office of the Environmental Advocate, call 800-
654-5227 or 304-926-0441. To reach Nixon email:
Pamela.Nixon@wv.gov. Stottlemyer can be reached at:
Dennis.O.Stottlemyer@wv.gov; and King at:
John.M.S.King@wv.gov.
Secretary of Energy Chu Visits Charleston, Discusses Carbon Capture
Carbon capture and sequestration (CCS) is not easily accomplished. Not only is the technology involved in sequestering carbon difficult to implement on a large scale, there are improtant public policy issues to be resolved, such as who owns the underground geologic formations into which the carbon is sent, and will the costs of obtaining those rights cause CCS to be prohibitively expensive. The WV Legislature has a group studying the issue under the leadership of former DEP Secretary Stephanie Timmermeyer, and anyone interested in the subject would benefit from a review of its preliminary report, released in July.
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Kanawha River Clean Up Is This Weekend
The 21st annual Great Kanawha River Cleanup, sponsored by the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection, is scheduled from 8 a.m. to noon on Saturday, Sept. 11.
Cleanup sites along the Kanawha River will include the beach at Winfield Locks; Roadside Park in St. Albans; Magic Island in Charleston; and Gauley Bridge (next to the former Save-A-Lot location).
Those wishing to volunteer are urged to register with the DEP so enough supplies can be obtained for each cleanup location. The DEP’s REAP program (Rehabilitation Environmental Action Plan) will supply bags and gloves for volunteers and will arrange for trash to be hauled away.
Last year, close to 100 volunteers collected 6.15 tons of debris and 70 tires.
For more information or to register to volunteer, contact Travis Cooper at 304-926-0499 ext. 1117, or e-mail:
Saturday, September 4, 2010
West Virginia Gas Industry Faces New Regulations
Last month Gov. Joe Manchin called together the industry and opponents to discuss the future of gas drilling, and announced there would be changes coming in the future. There was the implied threat that those who do not cooperate may see permits harder to come by. He's putting together a group to study possible changes and to make recommendations. As Gov. Manchin is widely expected to become Senator Manchin in November, he'll leave someone else to see this process to completion.
In the meantime, lots is going on. Here is a guidance from the Department of Highways on dealing with damages to roads and requiring bonds for possible road damage. Here is a report from the Associated Press regarding plans to increase the number of inspectors and other actions by the DEP, including a possible two-tier approach to permitting, one for smaller conventional wells and the other for larger horizontal wells. In addition, the Office of Oil and Gas recently took comment on revisions to its sediment and erosion control best management practices, and those will likely be changed in the near future to require additional pit construction controls and reclamation requirements for horizontal wells.
Friday, September 3, 2010
Judge Chambers Holds Mining Company in Contempt
The ruling is somewhat remarkable in that it holds Apogee in contempt for not exercising reasonable diligence in complying with an earlier order of the Court to install selenium treatment. The Court will consider what penalties to impose and whether to award attorneys fees and issue a ruling later this month.
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Spark Iginition Engine NESHAPS Issued by EPA
Anne Blankenship reports that EPA has issued its final national emission standards for hazardous air pollutants for existing stationary spark ignition reciprocating internal combustion engines that either are located at area sources of hazardous air pollutant emissions or that have a site rating of less than or equal to 500 brake horsepower and are located at major sources
of hazardous air pollutant emissions. These types of engines are frequently used for natural gas compression on pipelines.
This final rule is effective on October 19, 2010. A summary of the final rule is attached. You can find the complete federal register publication of the final rule at this link: http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2010/2010-20298.htm
Thursday, August 19, 2010
Coal Power Plant Construction Speeds Ahead
Thursday, August 12, 2010
West Virginia DEP Issues Narrative Criteria Guidance for Surface Mines
The West Virginia Water quality standards, 47 CSR 2, provide limits on the amount of pollutants that are allowed in state waters. Some of those limits are set as numbers that are not to be exceeded, but there is a section that describes, in words, what conditions are not allowed, like color in the water, or toxic effects. That has always raised some questions as to implementation, particularly as the narrative criteria are being used by EPA to deny mountaintop removal permits. The DEP has now come out with a guidance for implementing the narrative standard for surface mines. Below is the DEP's press release.
As the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection committed to doing in March, the agency has developed a guidance document for implementing and enforcing West Virginia’s narrative water quality criteria. The guidance document was developed in accordance with parameters set forth in the federal Clean Water Act and applied through the West Virginia Water Pollution Control Act.
The guidance document is a tool to be used by the DEP to develop National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
(NPDES) permits for the coal mining industry. The goals of the document are to advance water quality and assure that surface mining operations are conducted in ways that protect the narrative water quality standards.
Comments submitted by members of the public, as well as data and studies conducted by DEP staff were used in the development of the guidance document.
“We trust that EPA will give deference to West Virginia’s guidance document, as it was created to satisfy requirements outlined in the Clean Water Act,” DEP Cabinet Secretary Randy Huffman said.
The guidance document addresses matters such as reasonable potential analyses for aquatic impacts downstream and extensive monitoring before and during mining to ensure that aquatic life use is being adequately protected.
“This document will result in changes that are markedly different from how mining has been conducted for the last 30 years,” Huffman said.
The DEP considers the guidance a dynamic document that will likely be modified in the future as technology and best management practices develop and improve.
In addition, while this document specifically addresses concerns related to the mining industry, it is designed to be adapted in the future to address all discharges to water bodies that will cause, or that have the reasonable potential to cause or contribute to, excursions from narrative water quality standards.
BACKGROUND
It became apparent in 2009 that the absence of a written plan to address narrative water quality criteria at the state level led the US Environmental Protection Agency to insert itself into the 404 and 402 permitting processes.
Not only is EPA exercising its veto authority, it has completely taken control of all water-related permitting for mining activities.
On April 1, when the EPA issued its “comprehensive guidance” regarding requirements of the 402 and 404 Clean Water Act permitting programs, it allowed for the states to establish their own requirements. That is what West Virginia is doing.
Huffman said, “We developed this guidance document for West Virginia in a manner that we are confident is consistent with the Clean Water Act.”
The guidance document, an accompanying justification and background document and the comments submitted by the public in March are available on the agency’s website at www.dep.wv.gov under the Permitting section of the home page.