• This administration is committed to meeting the urgency of the climate crisis and taking the necessary actions required,'' said EPA Administrator Michael Regan. (timesfreepress.com)
  • EPA Administrator Michael Regan said that the plan is not designed to intentionally shut down coal-fired plants. (subjecttoclimate.org)
  • The science is clear: we must limit mercury and toxic air pollution to protect our kids and vulnerable communities," EPA Administrator Michael Regan said on Twitter . (ladyclever.com)
  • EPA's refusal to control these kilns' mercury emissions exacerbates a pollution problem that is already out of control. (earthjustice.org)
  • We can't afford to allow this damaging pollution to continue, and EPA's approach proposes to drive down those emissions over time and will increase opportunities for proven technologies like solar and wind. (clf.org)
  • The EPA's decades-old standards allow this pollution to wreak havoc on the environment and endanger our health. (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • The lawsuit challenges the EPA's decision in January not to update outdated and weak water-pollution control technology standards (called 'effluent limitation guidelines' or ELGs and pretreatment standards) for seven key industrial sectors: petroleum refineries, inorganic and organic chemical manufacturers, and factories that manufacture plastics, fertilizer, pesticides, and nonferrous metals. (commondreams.org)
  • EPA's 2011 letter used CERCLA ( the Superfund Act ) to explain their authority to have Walter Coke mitigate the pollution , and Walter Coke has cleaned up 24 sites of high risk soil pollution , but this is only the beginning of the steps necessary to address the community's needs. (chej.org)
  • Lawmakers plan to appropriate $2 million this legislative session to a legal campaign being waged by Rocky Mountain Power and the state of Wyoming, challenging EPA's move to include the Beehive and Cowboy states in the Cross State Air Pollution Rule, or CSAPR , also known as the "good neighbor provision" of the Clean Air Act. (sltrib.com)
  • We also strongly support EPA's proposal to require reductions in NOx emissions from other high-polluting stationary sources, in addition to power plants," state joint comments submitted to EPA by Sierra Club and several other groups across the nation. (sltrib.com)
  • Support EPA's proposed rules to limit pollution and fight this problem. (americanprogress.org)
  • Under EPA's oversight, entities like industrial facilities and municipal wastewater treatment plants are issued permits that limit the amount of pollutants they can discharge into the nation's waters. (gao.gov)
  • Whitehouse told Grist that such practices severely limit the EPA's ability to collect the evidence necessary to build cases against polluting companies. (grist.org)
  • Three Pennsylvania counties already fail to meet the EPA's existing weaker soot limits: Delaware, Lebanon and Allegheny. (environmentamerica.org)
  • The MAGA-majority court sharply curtailed the EPA's ability to limit climate pollution from power plants. (americanprogress.org)
  • But in 2006, under pressure from the chemical industry, the EPA said it was unaware of studies linking PFOA, formerly used to make DuPont's Teflon, to health harms - even though the agency had just fined DuPont for failing to report its health effects, and the EPA's own Science Advisory Board found that PFOA was a likely human carcinogen. (ewg.org)
  • Enforcement of a rule limiting power plant emissions of mercury and other hazardous pollutants will be resumed, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced Monday. (ladyclever.com)
  • Updated limits could dramatically reduce these pollutants in industrial discharges. (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • The Clean Water Act requires the EPA to limit discharges of industrial pollutants based on the best available wastewater treatment methods, and to tighten those limits at least once every five years where data show treatment technologies have improved. (commondreams.org)
  • But the agency has never set limits for many pollutants and has failed to update the few decades-old limits that exist - including limits set almost 40 years ago for oil refineries (1985), plastics manufacturers (1984) and fertilizer plants (1986). (commondreams.org)
  • For instance, stricter limits on pollutants like ozone may not go into effect and the EPA may not have the foundations to tackle emerging environmental health threats like the harm from newly introduced chemicals. (vox.com)
  • Currently CHEJ Science Director Stephen Lester and Science Intern Neggin Assadi are reviewing the soil pollution data and studying the connection between the Walter Coke pollutants and the elevated toxin levels in the soil of neighborhood yards. (chej.org)
  • On top of truck pollution, the many cars, trucks and trains that travel through the area burden residents with noises, odors and pollutants these vehicles emit, she said. (castanet.net)
  • The Clean Water Act is our best defense against unregulated industrial water pollution but we continue to be exposed to large volumes of dangerous, toxic pollutants in our drinking water supplies, fisheries, and recreational waters because EPA is not fully implementing the law," Kelly Hunter Foster, Waterkeeper Alliance Senior Attorney . (waterkeeper.org)
  • EPA must update pollution standards consistent with modern technologies that can reduce or even eliminate the discharge of hazardous pollutants like heavy metals, benzene, and mercury. (waterkeeper.org)
  • Per EPA estimates, 59 chemical fertilizer plants discharged nearly 90 million pounds of pollution into waterways in 2019. (kansasreflector.com)
  • Nearly 230 plants dumped about 2 billion pounds of pollution into American waterways in 2019. (kansasreflector.com)
  • The EPA estimates that 59 chemical fertilizer plants dumped nearly 90 million pounds of pollution into waterways in 2019. (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • The EPA estimates that 229 of these chemical plants dumped 2 billion pounds of pollution into our waterways in 2019 alone. (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • The EPA estimates that 229 inorganic chemical plants dumped over 2 billion pounds of pollution into waterways in 2019. (commondreams.org)
  • More than a dozen environmental groups are suing the federal Environmental Protection Agency over its failure to set water pollution limits for some industrial contaminants as well as its reluctance to update decades-old standards for others, arguing that the agency's inaction amounts to a "free pass to pollute" for hundreds of chemical and fertilizer plants, oil refineries, plastics manufacturers and other industrial facilities. (kansasreflector.com)
  • It's completely unacceptable that EPA has, for decades, ignored the law and failed to require modern wastewater pollution controls for oil refineries and petrochemical and plastics plants," said Jen Duggan, deputy director of the Environmental Integrity Project, a nonprofit focused on environmental law enforcement that coordinated the lawsuit by 13 environmental groups. (kansasreflector.com)
  • Eighty-one oil refineries across the U.S. discharged nearly 16 million pounds of nitrogen pollution into streams, rivers, lakes and bays in 2021, the group says. (kansasreflector.com)
  • A new rule would prohibit the EPA from regulating carbon pollution from oil and gas refineries. (nrdc.org)
  • Environmental groups sued the Environmental Protection Agency today for failing to set limits on harmful chemicals like cyanide, benzene, mercury and chlorides in wastewater emitted by oil refineries and plants that produce chemicals, fertilizer, plastics, pesticides and nonferrous metals. (commondreams.org)
  • Outdated pollution-control technology standards meant that, for example, 81 oil refineries across the United States dumped 15.7 million pounds of nitrogen and 1.6 billion pounds of chlorides, sulfates and other dissolved solids (which can be harmful to aquatic life) into waterways in 2021. (commondreams.org)
  • It's completely unacceptable that EPA has, for decades, ignored the law and failed to require modern wastewater pollution controls for oil refineries and petrochemical and plastics plants,' said Jen Duggan, deputy director of the Environmental Integrity Project, which coordinated the action by the 13 environmental groups. (commondreams.org)
  • Such a determination could trigger tougher limits on pollution from cars, trucks, ships and refineries. (latimes.com)
  • Using authority provided by Congress and affirmed by the Supreme Court, today the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced that it will begin using Section 111 of the Clean Air Act to establish federal emission limits on the amount of carbon pollution that comes from power plants and oil refineries. (nwf.org)
  • These limits - known as performance standards - would apply to newly constructed or modified power plants and refineries and, more importantly, can apply to existing facilities. (nwf.org)
  • And there are 150 oil refineries in the U.S. that represent the next largest stationary source of global warming pollution - accounting for approximately 3 percent of our total global warming pollution. (nwf.org)
  • Similarly, EPA will put forth draft limits for refineries by Dec. 2011 and final standards by November 2012. (nwf.org)
  • EPA estimates that 15% of women of childbearing age, or one out of every six, have unsafe mercury levels in their blood. (earthjustice.org)
  • Manufacturing of metals not including iron and steel contributed 100 million pounds of pollution in 2019, per EPA estimates. (kansasreflector.com)
  • Nonferrous metals: Manufacturing of metals not including iron and steel contributed 100 million pounds of pollution in 2019, per EPA estimates. (minnesotareformer.com)
  • Although implementation of the plan could be costly, around $8 billion a year, the EPA estimates that the plan would save 6,600 lives and more than $50 billion a year in healthcare costs related to air pollution. (eponline.com)
  • The EPA estimates their proposal will prevent 4,200 premature deaths per year, but public health and environmental organizations are asking for a stronger standard that would likely save three times more American lives. (environmentamerica.org)
  • By some estimates, PFAS are contaminating drinking water for more than 200 million Americans , and the EPA has said it has moved more quickly to regulate the compounds than any in the agency's history. (earthisland.org)
  • that have unjustly borne the burden of pollution for decades," Regan said in a speech at the University of Maryland. (timesfreepress.com)
  • If Administrator Regan adopts the strongest possible limits, we can have longer, healthier lives, with clearer skies and less planet-warming pollution. (environmentamerica.org)
  • President Biden and Administrator Regan need to finalize the strongest possible soot pollution protections as quickly as possible. (environmentamerica.org)
  • An estimated 609 facilities across the U.S. make plastic resins, synthetic fibers like polyester and rayon, per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), among other chemicals and "discharge millions of pounds of pollution per year, including benzene, nitrogen and lead," the EIP said. (kansasreflector.com)
  • These point-source categories are large sources of water pollution, dumping billions of gallons of wastewater into our rivers, streams and lakes each year," the group said, noting that EPA standards in many cases "do not limit discharges of nutrient pollution or toxics like benzene, mercury, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), selenium, per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), and heavy metals. (kansasreflector.com)
  • Plastics plants in particular discharge, without any federal limits , hormone-disrupting phthalates , PFAS forever chemicals , and microplastics . (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • On Facebook Live, EWG Legislative Attorney Melanie Benesh recently detailed how the EPA has failed to protect Americans from PFAS, which have been linked to suppression of the immune system and are associated with an elevated risk of cancer and reproductive and developmental harms , among other serious health concerns . (ewg.org)
  • Failed to set a legal limit for PFAS in drinking water. (ewg.org)
  • Failed to clean up existing PFAS pollution. (ewg.org)
  • Although more than 2,500 industrial facilities are likely discharging PFAS into the air and water, the EPA has done nothing to stop them. (ewg.org)
  • Neither the EPA nor the Food and Drug Administration has taken steps to ban the use of PFAS from household products ranging from carpets to cosmetics. (ewg.org)
  • Instead, the EPA exempted many products from a rule governing new uses of PFAS. (ewg.org)
  • Meanwhile, the EPA has not only failed to finalize a rule to limit new uses of PFAS but has also continued to approve new PFAS chemicals - despite failing to test to determine whether they are any safer than the hundreds already on the market. (ewg.org)
  • The EPA has a long record of failing to protect us from PFAS pollution. (ewg.org)
  • In 1998, EPA officials were first notified by 3M that PFAS chemicals were toxic. (ewg.org)
  • Not until 2009 did the EPA issue its first PFAS action plan and establish a non-enforceable provisional health advisory for PFOA and PFOS, an ingredient in 3M's Scotchgard. (ewg.org)
  • Without irony, the EPA recently issued a statement touting the agency's "aggressive" efforts to address PFAS pollution - just hours before the White House threatened to veto House legislation that would set deadlines for EPA action on PFAS. (ewg.org)
  • Extraordinary new limits introduced to require municipal utilities to remove six PFAS compounds from drinking water. (earthisland.org)
  • The US Environmental Protection Agency has taken the extraordinary step of setting legal drinking water limits for six of the most studied and toxic PFAS compounds, known commonly as "forever chemicals", that are at the center of an ongoing environmental crisis. (earthisland.org)
  • The new rules are "groundbreaking", said Erik Olson, senior strategic director for the Natural Resources Defense Council non-profit, which tracks PFAS pollution. (earthisland.org)
  • Public health advocates say the discrepancy is likely the result of industry pressure on the EPA and an inability of PFAS tests that regulators use to check water for the chemicals at levels as low as 0.02 ppt. (earthisland.org)
  • Thousands more New Hampshire residents may be drinking tainted water in a region plagued by health problems thought to stem from PFAS pollution. (earthisland.org)
  • The goal of the Act is to eliminate pollution discharges into U.S. waters - and that can only happen if we continually strengthen regulation as technology improves. (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • Scott Pruitt ousted EPA science advisers. (vox.com)
  • EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt. (vox.com)
  • Despite a pledge by former EPA boss Scott Pruitt and staff efforts to develop a formal rule, the agency has so far failed to designate PFOA and PFOS as hazardous substances, which would kick-start the cleanup process at the most contaminated sites. (ewg.org)
  • The Environmental Protection Agency finalized rules late Thursday to curb pollution from industrial boilers and cement plants, agreeing to give industry additional time for compliance and easing some emissions limits from earlier proposals. (earthzine.org)
  • Today, the EPA has released a proposal that will place tough emissions limits on coal-fired power plants, which is expected to cut carbon emissions by 30 percent. (eponline.com)
  • The agency will propose greenhouse gas emissions limits this year. (castanet.net)
  • During his four years in office, former President Donald Trump's appointees to the Environmental Protection Agency, or EPA, decimated the agency's ability to catch and penalize polluters breaking environmental rules. (grist.org)
  • In 2019, the Trump administration adopted a "no surprises" policy that meant EPA inspectors would no longer show up at facilities without first notifying state environmental agencies. (grist.org)
  • According to a 2021 report, Trouble in the Air , more than one in six Americans (58.4 million people) suffered through more than 100 days of elevated air pollution in 2020. (environmentamerica.org)
  • WASHINGTON (AP) - The Biden administration proposed new limits Thursday on greenhouse gas emissions from coal- and gas-fired power plants, its most ambitious effort yet to roll back planet-warming pollution from the nation's second-largest contributor to climate change. (timesfreepress.com)
  • Under the Biden Administration, the EPA set into motion several regulatory actions, including a plan to impose stronger limits on tailpipe emissions from cars and trucks and tightening restrictions on emissions of methane , a leading contributor to global warming, the AP said. (ladyclever.com)
  • But some lobbyists say the timeline proposed by the Biden administration is limited by what the industry can accomplish. (idradebeleeds.com)
  • Giles, other former enforcement officials, and environmental advocates who spoke to Grist said that the Biden EPA has a long road ahead of it. (grist.org)
  • By setting the strongest possible soot limits, the Biden administration can help Americans breathe easier. (environmentamerica.org)
  • Ignoring last June's SCOTUS decision in West Virgina v. EPA, the rogue Biden regime plans another assault on our electricity grid by essentially requiring CO2 capture and storage for fossil fuel plants. (climatedepot.com)
  • 1997. Threshold limit values for chemical substances and physical agents and biological exposure indices. (cdc.gov)
  • Coroner: Ella Kissi-Debrah died as a result of asthma worsened by exposure to excessive air pollution. (cnn.com)
  • Her medical cause of death was listed as acute respiratory failure, severe asthma and air pollution exposure. (cnn.com)
  • The coroner's conclusion was that Ella "died of asthma contributed to by exposure to excessive air pollution. (cnn.com)
  • Faber writes in his 2008 book Capitalizing on Environmental Injustice that "over 164 million Americans are now at risk for respiratory and other health problems from exposure to excessive air pollution. (iexaminer.org)
  • Last year, after science showed virtually no level of exposure to drinking water is safe, the EPA set non-enforceable "advisory health limits" of 0.02 ppt and 0.004 ppt for PFOA and PFOS, respectively. (earthisland.org)
  • ATSDR joins EPA, Arizona health and environment agencies and the University of Arizona to educate community members about arsenic and lead exposure from the Iron King Mine and Humboldt Smelter Site in Dewey-Humboldt, AZ. (cdc.gov)
  • It provides recommendations to communities and industries to limit or prevent exposure to hazardous substances. (cdc.gov)
  • the risk is generally low, however, for otherwise healthy people who have only limited exposure. (cdc.gov)
  • Conversely, those with preexisting heart and lung disease, children, and older adults have an increased risk for adverse health effects from even short-term exposure to air pollution. (cdc.gov)
  • Health Administration's (OSHA) health stan- response data and provides a method to develop the probability of an dards have not been developed with explicit risk-based exposure limits (33). (cdc.gov)
  • New research suggests that long-term exposure to air pollution during and after pregnancy increases the risk of postpartum depression (PPD), adding to prior research linking air pollution to mental health issues. (medscape.com)
  • These findings suggest that long-term antepartum and postpartum air pollution exposure is a potentially modifiable environmental risk factor for PPD and an important public health issue to address for improved maternal mental health," the authors write. (medscape.com)
  • 8. Hospitality workers are exposed to air pollution levels that are four times the EPA annual average occupational exposure standard. (who.int)
  • 101 and responses to survey questions about awareness of air quality alerts, perception of air quality, and changes in behavior to reduce air pollution exposure using logistic regression. (cdc.gov)
  • Short-term exposure to air pollution can result in acute health effects, particularly for individuals with respiratory and cardiovascular disease. (cdc.gov)
  • In this role, he develops and oversees CDC's communication on asthma, air pollution, climate and indoor air health issues such as carbon monoxide poisoning and mold exposure. (cdc.gov)
  • But she added: "Also it's about other children still as we walk around our city of high levels of air pollution. (cnn.com)
  • A previous inquest ruling from 2014, which concluded Ella died of acute respiratory failure, was quashed by the High Court following new evidence about the dangerous levels of air pollution close to her home, PA reported. (cnn.com)
  • High levels of air pollution and extreme hot and cold temperatures have been linked to increases in heart disease and deaths from heart attacks. (cdc.gov)
  • The October wildfires in Northern California killed at least 44 people and caused unprecedented levels of air pollution. (medscape.com)
  • If finalized, the proposed regulation would mark the first time the federal government has restricted carbon dioxide emissions from existing power plants, which generate about 25% of U.S. greenhouse gas pollution, second only to the transportation sector. (timesfreepress.com)
  • The announcement poses a fundamental challenge to the agency's work as a regulator by instituting new restrictions on the scientific findings used by the EPA. (vox.com)
  • It's reducing the pool of science the agency can use," said Christopher Zarba, who retired earlier this year from the EPA as the coordinator of the agency's science advisory boards. (vox.com)
  • T]he Associated Press reported that a leaked confidential report proved that EPA had scientific evidence against Range, but changed course after the company threatened not to cooperate with the agency's ongoing national study of fracking. (grist.org)
  • A layer of pollution can be seen hovering over Los Angeles, California on October 17, 2017, where even though air quality has improved in recent decades, smog levels remain among the nations's worst, with wildfires in the region also contributing to poor air quality. (cnn.com)
  • The EPA typically sets standards for tailpipe emissions from passenger cars, trucks and other vehicles, but California has historically been granted waivers to impose its own, stricter standards. (castanet.net)
  • In a letter last year, attorneys general from 15 states, Washington, D.C., and New York City urged the EPA to approve the California truck standards. (castanet.net)
  • California activists Andasan and Brenda Huerta Soto, an organizer with the People's Collective for Environmental Justice, are troubled by the impact of pollution from trucks and other vehicles on communities with a large population of residents of color that live near busy ports in Los Angeles, Oakland and other cities as well as warehouse-dense inland areas. (castanet.net)
  • Last year, the EPA reinstated a waiver allowing a California rule aimed at limiting vehicular pollution to take effect. (fox2now.com)
  • It said the bill would "restrict the ability of California and its citizens to address its severe air pollution challenges. (fox2now.com)
  • Restrictive government mandates isn't how we're going to lead the next hundred years, yet, that's what EPA and California are trying to do," House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairwoman Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.) said. (fox2now.com)
  • Barlow said there was a failure in this period to reduce the level of nitrogen dioxide to within the limits set by EU and domestic law. (cnn.com)
  • The EPA released rules that will cut nitrogen oxide pollution, which contributes to the formation of smog, by more than 80% in 2027. (castanet.net)
  • particle pollution which is a product of burning or combusting processes, diesel pollution, and nitrogen oxides (NOx). (iexaminer.org)
  • As a result, there is planet-warming pollution from power plant emissions A decrease of about 25 percent In the last decade, there was no direct regulation. (idradebeleeds.com)
  • If implemented, the proposed regulation would be the first time the federal government has restricted carbon dioxide emissions from existing power plants, which generate about 25 percent of the planet-warming pollution produced by the United States. (climatedepot.com)
  • If those three regulations are implemented as proposed, they would significantly reduce the planet-warming pollution created by the world's largest economy. (climatedepot.com)
  • There are about 120 such plants that discharge into U.S. waterways but EPA has not revised technology-based effluent limits for the sector since 1984. (kansasreflector.com)
  • Plastics molding and forming: There are about 120 such plants that discharge into U.S. waterways but EPA has not revised technology-based effluent limits for the sector since 1984. (minnesotareformer.com)
  • A 9-year-old girl who died after an asthma attack is thought to be the first person in the world to have air pollution listed as a cause of death in a landmark coroner's ruling. (cnn.com)
  • The charities Asthma UK and the British Lung Foundation said Ella was the first person in world history to have air pollution listed as a cause of death on her death certificate. (cnn.com)
  • Assistant coroner Philip Barlow said that Ella's mother had not been given information about air pollution and asthma that could have led to her take steps which "might" have prevented her daughter's death, according to PA Media. (cnn.com)
  • Air pollution was a significant contributory factor to both the induction and exacerbation of her asthma," said Barlow as he gave his conclusions at Southwark Coroner's Court after a two-week inquest. (cnn.com)
  • Susan Lyon and Jorge Madrid discuss the growing costs of asthma in the United States and how a new EPA rule would help lessen the pollution that aggravates the disease. (americanprogress.org)
  • In Philadelphia, more than 20 percent of children have asthma," said Stephanie Wein , advocate with PennEnvironment who spoke outside the EPA on Tuesday. (environmentamerica.org)
  • In the wake of the Trump administration, according to Whitehouse, the EPA has "become more and more timid" about pursuing inspections without the permission of state governments. (grist.org)
  • In a series of memos, the Trump EPA also gave states more authority to implement their own enforcement programs. (grist.org)
  • Nearly a decade ago, Mr. Obama tried to enact broad limits on power plant pollution that were first blocked by the Supreme Court and then rolled back by President Donald J. Trump. (climatedepot.com)
  • The proposal "relies on proven, readily available technologies to limit carbon pollution" and builds on industry practices already underway to move toward clean energy, he said. (timesfreepress.com)
  • As a way to help reduce America's carbon dioxide emissions by 30 percent, the EPA has released a rule proposal that limits emissions of power plants that operate by using coal. (eponline.com)
  • When the agency doesn't do its job, sewage loaded with toxic industrial pollution threatens the decades of progress we've made in cleaning up Boston Harbor. (clf.org)
  • Yet, this year the agency has failed once again to update decades-old regulations that should limit pollution from dirty industries. (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • But EPA has once again refused to change the limits - some of which are decades old - for several dirty industries. (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • For decades the EPA has let these dirty industries pollute our rivers and bays instead of making them keep pace with advances in technologies that tackle water pollution, as the Clean Water Act demands,' said Hannah Connor, environmental health deputy director at the Center for Biological Diversity . (commondreams.org)
  • Between 2016 and 2022, the agency worked off an advisory health limit of 70 parts per trillion (ppt) for PFOS and PFOA, two compounds commonly produced and used for decades. (earthisland.org)
  • The Bush Administration's Environmental Protection Agency signed a rule late last Friday night that fails to control mercury pollution from any currently operating cement kilns, some of the nation's worst mercury emitters. (earthjustice.org)
  • Event attendees were encouraged to write comments on postcards to be sent to the United States Environmental Protections Agency, or EPA, in support of the proposed changes. (ncronline.org)
  • Panel host IHM Sr. Barbara Stanbridge said, "We want to encourage the EPA to truly be an environmental protection agency … not [one] protecting the fossil fuel industry. (ncronline.org)
  • Adrian Dominican Sr. Virginia (Ginny) King said, in the church, religious women have led the way on environmental issues, stating that the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, or LCWR, has long supported limits on carbon pollution for power plants. (ncronline.org)
  • Albuquerque, NM - Today, the Environmental Protection Agency proposed the first-ever, federal limits on carbon pollution from power plants, the largest single source of global warming pollution in America. (environmentamerica.org)
  • The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) thinks this plan could help a lot. (subjecttoclimate.org)
  • EPA has a clear authority and responsibility to protect Americans from mercury and other toxic pollution from power plants, and today's finding reflects that,″ Michael Panfil, a lawyer for the Environmental Defense Fund, told the AP . (ladyclever.com)
  • In a letter to the agency advising that the lawsuit was being filed, the Environmental Integrity Project noted that the act requires EPA to establish pollution limits based on the best available treatment methods and then review the limits yearly and every five years "to keep pace with advances in technologies to reduce - and ultimately eliminate - water pollution from industrial sources. (kansasreflector.com)
  • The Environmental Protection Agency has proposed what could be the first-ever limits on carbon pollution from most power plants. (cleanenergy.org)
  • But the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has found that about half of the waterways it assessed fail our national water quality standards . (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • That's why Food & Water Watch has joined a dozen allies, represented by the Environmental Integrity Project, in a lawsuit against the EPA. (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • Meanwhile, the Environmental Protection Agency plans to hold public hearings in Colorado, Texas and Pennsylvania on its proposed regulations for controlling air pollution at oil and gas wells. (cpr.org)
  • Reversing a long-standing interpretation of its own regulations, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has issued "guidance" to its regional offices and states and seeks public comment on its intent to ease air-pollution permit rules for facility construction under the federal Clean Air Act. (enr.com)
  • The Harvard Environmental and Energy Law Program says that since 2017, EPA has issued notices, memoranda, guidance and letters that narrowed the definition of what "sources" are, limited pollution considered during the NSR review process, and did not enforce the program consistently. (enr.com)
  • Under the schedule agreed to by EPA, states and environmental litigants, the agency will issue draft standards for power plants by July 2011 and final standards by May 2012. (nwf.org)
  • Second, under the Clean Air Act, performance standards are intended to promote the use of the best air pollution control technologies and take into account the cost of such technology and any other non-air quality, health, and environmental impacts. (nwf.org)
  • The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) oversees and enforces compliance with the Clean Water Act. (gao.gov)
  • Getting these barriers out of the way lets EPA and DOJ do their job: making sure environmental standards are protecting people. (grist.org)
  • It won't be easy," said Tim Whitehouse, who was a senior EPA attorney under former President Bill Clinton and is now executive director of the nonprofit Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility. (grist.org)
  • WASHINGTON - Advocates with Environment America, PennEnvironment and U.S. PIRG joined other health and environmental groups to deliver more than 500,000 public comments to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) headquarters Tuesday in support of stronger limits on soot pollution. (environmentamerica.org)
  • Andasan and other environmental activists from across the country who are a part of the Moving Forward Network, a 50-member group based at Occidental College in Los Angeles, met with EPA officials recently to discuss national regulations to limit emissions from trucks and other vehicles. (castanet.net)
  • Environmental Protection Agency Administrator, Gina McCarthy released today rules for restricting carbon pollution from new power plants. (momscleanairforce.org)
  • During the its extensive process to hear from stakeholders throughout the nation the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reached out to Hawaii. (hawaiifreepress.com)
  • The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has identified 1,397 sites on its National Priorities List (NPL). (cdc.gov)
  • However, under the Clean Air Act, the state can pursue clean car rules that are stricter than those from the federal government if they get permission from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). (fox2now.com)
  • Air pollution, both indoor and outdoor, is a major contributor to the environmental burden of disease in Pakistan. (who.int)
  • Environmental risks arise from both indoor air pollution, much of it caused by the domestic use of solid fuels, and outdoor air pollution. (who.int)
  • Federal and provincial environmental protection agencies have fixed and mobile air quality monitoring stations but data collection is limited. (who.int)
  • The Secretary of the Punjab Environmental Protection Department (EPD) requested WHO support in assessing the health effects of air pollution and the monitoring of air quality by Punjab EPD staff and help organizing stakeholder discussions to generate recommendations for the monitoring of air quality and ways to mitigate its health impacts. (who.int)
  • NCEH also combats illnesses associated with environmental hazards such as air pollution, lead, contaminated food and water, and radiation. (cdc.gov)
  • Air pollution is a leading environmental threat to human health. (cdc.gov)
  • The findings are compared with those of the review published recently by the Californian Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). (who.int)
  • In addition they have reviewed studies of the effects of environmental tobacco smoke on children with cystic fibrosis and conclude from the limited evidence that there is a strong case for a relationship between parental smoking and admissions to hospital. (who.int)
  • States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) standards. (who.int)
  • But the EPA is allowing polluters to rely on technology older than the internet. (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • Stringent pollution limits over these big sources are long overdue and will begin holding polluters accountable for their contribution to the climate crisis. (nwf.org)
  • The idea is that flexible enforcement agreements allow the EPA to ensure that polluters mitigate the harm they cause by funding cleanup, air and water quality monitoring, and other restorative efforts. (grist.org)
  • The EPA promised it would set a drinking water standard for PFOA and PFOS, the two most notorious fluorinated compounds. (ewg.org)
  • But although the EPA has issued a preliminary determination to set limits for PFOA and PFOS, actually enacting enforceable limits could take up to a decade - if not far longer . (ewg.org)
  • EPA is delivering on a vital piece of President Obama's Climate Action Plan by proposing a Clean Power Plan that will cut harmful carbon pollution from our largest source--power plants," said EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy. (eponline.com)
  • The EPA did not immediately comment on the lawsuit. (kansasreflector.com)
  • The EPA did not comment on the lawsuit, which was filed by Physicians for Social Responsibility-Los Angeles, Desert Citizens Against Pollution, Communities for a Better Environment and the Natural Resources Defense Council, among other groups. (latimes.com)
  • Congress has mandated that the agency use the best available science when it comes up with limits for hazardous chemicals or evaluates the effectiveness of its own regulations. (vox.com)
  • The EPA also doesn't limit nurdles , tiny plastic pellets that often spill from plastics plants. (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • In response to lawsuits filed by Earthjustice and Sierra Club, a federal appeals court has twice ordered EPA to set mercury standards. (earthjustice.org)
  • In December, 2000, a federal court of appeals ordered EPA to set emission standards for cement kilns' mercury emissions. (earthjustice.org)
  • Although EPA did establish certain housekeeping management practices related to cement kiln dust, the agency did not expect these to reduce current mercury emissions. (earthjustice.org)
  • The court ordered EPA to set real limits on cement plants' mercury emissions," said Marti Sinclair, chair of Sierra Club's National Air Committee. (earthjustice.org)
  • Despite a deliberate campaign by the Administration and EPA to portray cement kilns' mercury emissions as impossible to control, there are many available control methods. (earthjustice.org)
  • While the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards have been successful, there are still many coal plants that release significant amounts of mercury pollution and put American families at risk,″ Panfil said. (ladyclever.com)
  • But a group representing investor-owned electric companies noted that industry efforts to lower mercury pollution are well underway. (ladyclever.com)
  • Coal-fired power plants are the largest manmade source of mercury pollution, which enter the food chain through fish and other items that people consume, the AP said. (ladyclever.com)
  • Visit the EPA for more on mercury pollution . (ladyclever.com)
  • Why Doesn't The EPA Protect US From Mercury Pollution? (typepad.com)
  • Attorney Jim Pew has won two court orders from the EPA to act to protect us from cement-industry created Mercury pollution , but hasn't seen any results yet: 'If we knew more about how much mercury they're putting out, the picture would be even bleaker. (typepad.com)
  • Under the federal Clean Air Act, Congress established a one-hour standard for ozone pollution, a principal contributor to smog, and the EPA was to certify no later than May whether air districts had met the standard. (latimes.com)
  • The power plant rule is one of at least a half-dozen EPA rules limiting power plant emissions and wastewater treatment. (timesfreepress.com)
  • Martinez, the NRDC attorney, said the region has taken measures to control ozone pollution, "but the question is whether it's happening fast enough. (latimes.com)
  • Feds set to impose 'good neighbor' rule that would require costly emission controls on coal plants in Utah and Wyoming needed to limit ozone pollution in Colorado. (sltrib.com)
  • Real-world data on ozone values and trends demonstrate that ozone pollution is worse than EPA has projected. (sltrib.com)
  • Almost all coal plants - along with large, frequently used gas-fired plants - would have to cut or capture nearly all their carbon dioxide emissions by 2038, the EPA said. (timesfreepress.com)
  • The process of generating electricity is the single largest source of global warming pollution in the United States, representing 41 percent of all carbon dioxide emissions. (nwf.org)
  • President Biden's administration is poised to announce limits on greenhouse gas emissions from power plants that could compel them to capture the pollution from their smokestacks, technology now used by fewer than 20 of the nation's 3,400 coal and gas-fired plants, according to three people who were briefed on the rule. (climatedepot.com)
  • It is in large part a testament to the millions of Americans, more than 600 local elected officials, and hundreds of small businesses who have already demanded the cutting of carbon pollution. (environmentamerica.org)
  • The EPA announced its updated guidelines for the clean-up of toxic groundwater pollution, which could have a possible affect on millions of Americans' drinking water. (nationofchange.org)
  • Americans deserve to assess the legitimacy of the science underpinning EPA decisions that may impact their lives. (vox.com)
  • And 206 million Americans - more than 60 percent - were exposed to over a month of elevated soot pollution. (environmentamerica.org)
  • Clearly, Asians, African Americans, Hispanics, and the working poor are bearing the greater health risks from air pollution coming from nearby industrial facilities, highways and transportation infrastructure. (iexaminer.org)
  • Idsal's new guidance contends that in the past, EPA has considered "almost every physical on-site construction activity that is of a permanent nature to constitute the beginning of 'actual construction. (enr.com)
  • The suit contends the EPA missed a May deadline to, in effect, determine whether the ozone level in the region is hazardous to public health. (latimes.com)
  • Measures such as limiting time outdoors or performing less strenuous tasks when air quality levels are better can mitigate these risks, but only if people are aware of both these recommendations and how to know when air quality is best, and worst. (cdc.gov)
  • The rule also would apply to future electric plants and would avoid up to 617 million metric tons of carbon dioxide through 2042, equivalent to annual emissions of 137 million passenger vehicles, the EPA said. (timesfreepress.com)
  • The EPA rule would not mandate use of equipment to capture and store carbon emissions - a technology that is expensive and still being developed. (timesfreepress.com)
  • It is reassuring to see a quick return to the rule of law at DOJ," said Cynthia Giles, who was in charge of enforcement at the EPA during the Obama administration. (grist.org)
  • He is already rolling back rules on limiting air pollution. (vox.com)
  • Those rules are still waiting on EPA approval. (castanet.net)
  • These rules would mark the first federal carbon emission limits on power plants, which represented 40 percent of all energy-related emissions of greenhouse gases in 2012, according to the Energy Information Administration. (momscleanairforce.org)
  • The new EPA rules allow states to employ a range of measures to meet carbon emission targets, including renewable energy and energy efficiency projects. (hawaiifreepress.com)
  • These facilities are some of the largest industrial sources of toxic pollution in the U.S., the EIP says. (kansasreflector.com)
  • Toxic pollution from cars and trucks overheats the earth and clogs the air in our communities," said CLF staff attorney Chase Whiting. (clf.org)
  • Some of the biggest culprits: dirty industries that dump billions of pounds of toxic pollution into our waterways each year. (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • Inorganic chemical plants are some of the biggest industrial dischargers of toxic pollution in the U.S. These plants make products like PVC and vinyl chloride , which recently made headlines after spilling in the train derailment at East Palestine , Ohio. (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • To that end, the law mandates that EPA assess and, if needed, tighten limits at least once every five years. (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • As EPA evaluates more sites, the number of sites at which gasoline is found may change. (cdc.gov)
  • The EPA needs to bring pollution standards into the 21st century. (commondreams.org)
  • Travelers should be mindful of, and limit exposures to, outdoor and indoor air pollution and carbon monoxide ( Table 4-02 ). (cdc.gov)
  • Secondhand smoke from smoking tobacco is a primary contributor to indoor air pollution. (cdc.gov)
  • 6. The pollution levels f indoor places where smoking was both observed and not observed was significantly higher than the pollution levels in countries with 100% smoke-free laws. (who.int)
  • We expect EPA to do its job and protect America's waterways and public health as required by the Clean Water Act. (kansasreflector.com)
  • Climate change, fueled by carbon pollution, supercharges risks to our health, our economy, and our way of life. (eponline.com)
  • That program is a set of regulations under the law to protect public health and the environment from air pollution when major new air emissions sources are built or modified. (enr.com)
  • As an agency that protects public health, the EPA draws on a wide body of research to inform regulations like how much lead is safe in drinking water (less than 15 parts per billion , in case you were wondering). (vox.com)
  • The standard, which measures average ozone levels over eight hours, offers more health protection and requires stricter pollution controls, he said. (latimes.com)
  • Toxic air pollution is a public health crisis, especially for our children," he said in a statement . (cnn.com)
  • The proposed rule's cost benefits, projected to be worth at least $9 billion a year in improved public health, far outweigh its costs, according to an EPA fact sheet . (sltrib.com)
  • We are a community of over one million parents united against air and climate pollution to protect our children's health. (momscleanairforce.org)
  • Climate change - caused by carbon pollution - is one of the most significant public health threats of our time. (momscleanairforce.org)
  • Studies have found positive correlations between cardiovascular health and air pollution . (iexaminer.org)
  • The study was important in determining that limiting pollution is crucial to human health. (iexaminer.org)
  • Absolutely not, and that's why the EPA has much lower health advisories," said Linda Birnbaum, a former head of the US National Toxicology Program and EPA scientist. (earthisland.org)
  • The EPA set a variable "health hazard index" that includes PFBS, GenX, PFHxS and PFNA. (earthisland.org)
  • The purpose of this project was to promote existing CDC and EPA resources for respiratory health through developing new materials and executing a dissemination plan that reaches the general public and connects them to those existing resources. (cdc.gov)
  • By developing new communication materials, CDC can ensure that consumers take advantage of existing resources and can help vulnerable populations to reduce the negative effects of air pollution on their health. (cdc.gov)
  • Although air pollution has decreased in many parts of the world, it represents a major and growing health problem for the residents of some cities in certain industrializing countries. (cdc.gov)
  • Some of you might remember it was formerly called the Health Pollution and Air Branch. (cdc.gov)
  • We are reaffirming these standards to reduce pollution from power plants, so everyone - no matter their zip code or money in their pocket - can breathe clean air. (ladyclever.com)
  • However, for 40 of the 59 industries subject to the pollution limits, the standards were "last updated 30 or more years ago, and 17 of those date back to the 1970s," the EIP says. (kansasreflector.com)
  • About half of all the river and stream miles and lake acreage in the U.S. fail to meet water quality standards because of pollution, "which means half the country's assessed waterways do not support intended uses like aquatic life and drinking water, the EIP says. (kansasreflector.com)
  • Outdated standards mean more water pollution is pouring into U.S. waters than should be allowed because some plants are using technology standards from the Reagan era - before common use of the Internet, email or cell phones. (commondreams.org)
  • First, establishing these performance standards will create the "regulatory certainty" that many utilities want to see before they start reducing their carbon pollution. (nwf.org)
  • Indeed, a new report by the Main Street Alliance speaks to the economic benefit of creating pollution standards and just two weeks ago a number of utilities wrote to the Wall Street supporting pollution limits under the Clean Air Act. (nwf.org)
  • The EPA is proposing to update its standards for the first time in a decade. (environmentamerica.org)
  • Federal pollution standards for heavy trucks are also getting tougher. (castanet.net)
  • 1 A classic 1993 study, called " The Six City Study " 2 followed 8,111 people across six U.S cities from 1974 to 1991 and found that not only were there positive correlations between particle pollution and death by respiratory and cardiovascular causes, but as the Clean Air Act came into play and pollution decreased, mortality rate also decreased. (iexaminer.org)
  • Right now, power plants create about one-fourth of all the pollution in the U.S. The only thing that creates more pollution is cars and trucks. (subjecttoclimate.org)
  • Duggan said if the EPA required, for example, the modern treatment controls that are standard for municipal sewage plants that discharge into the Chesapeake Bay - like denitrification, which removes nitrates and nitrite compounds that can lead to large algal blooms - water pollution could be cut significantly. (kansasreflector.com)
  • Industrial water pollution is a major problem for our country's waterways. (foodandwaterwatch.org)
  • Forcing people and wildlife like endangered Atlantic sturgeon to bear the weight of toxic water pollution while industries rake in record profits isn't just morally wrong, it's also legally indefensible. (commondreams.org)