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  • Updated
    29
    Mar
    2013
    8:17pm, EDT

    EPA proposes tighter fuel, emissions standards; could push price of gas higher

    The Environmental Protection Agency announced a clean air proposal that would reduce sulfur emissions by two-thirds and impose new tailpipe emission standards for 2017 cars and later – but reducing sulfur levels could be difficult and expensive for refineries. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The Obama administration on Friday frustrated the oil industry by proposing tighter restrictions on sulfur in gasoline and pollution from cars and trucks — rules that the government said would be equivalent to taking 33 million tailpipes off American roads but that angered the oil industry.


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    The Environmental Protection Agency estimates the regulations would have almost no effect on the price of gas, but the industry, citing its own research, said the price could be driven higher by as much as 9 cents per gallon.

    The proposed rules were reportedly delayed until after the election because of concern over their tricky politics.

    Environmental groups called the restrictions a strong step to protect public health. The administration said the standards would prevent as many as 2,400 deaths a year and save $8 billion to $23 billion a year in health costs by 2030.

    Car companies also support the restrictions in part because they create a nationwide standard for sulfur, cutting production costs.


    “The only ones against these standards are the oil companies,” said Michael Brune, the executive director of the Sierra Club.

    The main trade group for the refiners, the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers, said the standards were “completely without merit” and too burdensome for the industry.

    The American Petroleum Institute, which represents oil companies, said the rules were part of a “tsunami of federal regulations,” and would ultimately raise greenhouse-gas emissions because of the energy-eating equipment it will take to bring refineries in line.

    “We urge the administration to bring common sense back into the regulatory process,” said Bob Greco, director of the API’s Downstream Group. “Unnecessary regulations just mean higher costs and lost jobs.”

    Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

    Automobiles pass by giant wind turbines powered by strong winds in Palm Springs, Calif.

    The Obama administration has already required the auto industry to double fuel efficiency by 2025.

    In every state but California, gas can contain sulfur at a measurement of up to 30 parts per million. The proposed rule would reduce the nationwide limit to 10, bringing the other 49 states in line with California.

    Sulfur in gas makes catalytic converters less effective, and when catalytic converters are less effective, cars produce more of the gases and fine particles that cause harmful smog and soot.

    In addition, the EPA wants to reduce tailpipe emissions beginning in 2017 — cutting certain smog-forming chemical compounds by 80 percent and harmful particulates by 70 percent.

    Car prices could be driven higher by $130, the EPA estimated.

    House Republicans lined up against the idea and vowed to review it. Rep. Ed Whitfield of Kentucky, chair of the House subcommittee on energy and power, said the administration “cannot be more out of touch.”

    Citing EPA research, deputy White House press secretary Josh Earnest told reporters aboard Air Force One that the impact on the price of gas would probably be a penny or less.

    Trading that “for tens of thousands fewer cases of respiratory ailments like asthma in children and thousands of lives saved is an indication that they’ve done a lot of work on this and a lot of analysis,” he said. “But again, we’re in the proposal stage, not in the final rulemaking stage.”

    The precise impact on the price of gas from the restrictions proposed Friday is impossible to predict, said Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst for the Oil Price Information Service and GasBuddy.com, which tracks gas prices around the country.

    Since the beginning of last year, refiners in North America have had it pretty good: They have enjoyed the cheapest natural gas in the world and, from Canada, cheap shale oil. That has meant fatter profit margins.

    Several years ago, though, when prices were higher, refinery closures were common. And if refineries are under pressure as they are asked to convert to the new sulfur standards in five years, more could close.

    That would leave the price of gas more vulnerable to price spikes.

    “We’ve got plenty of time to prepare,” Kloza told NBC News. “In truth, there are many, many moving parts in the oil business right now.”

    Lately, the price of gas has been falling. Since rising almost 50 cents to an average of almost $3.75 a gallon, it has fallen steadily this month and is almost back to $3.60.

    A senior administration official told The Associated Press that only 16 of the 111 refineries in the United States would need to invest in major equipment to meet the restrictions.

    Of the remaining 95 refineries, 29 already meet the standards because they sell cleaner fuel in California or elsewhere in the world, and 66 would need to make more minor modifications, the AP reported.

    “It’s been very prosperous,” Kloza said of the refineries. “But history tells us it can turn very challenging very, very quickly.”

    This story was originally published on Fri Mar 29, 2013 1:34 PM EDT

    1233 comments

    Yes.....Go ahead ....Keep causing the American people more and more pain.....and see where that gets you.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: emissions, environmental-protection-agency, fuel-standards, updated
  • 10
    Aug
    2012
    7:28am, EDT

    Clean Water Act's anti-pollution goals prove elusive as polluters are exempt

    By Robert McClure and Jason Alcorn, InvestigateWest
    with Bonnie Stewart, EarthFix

    Beside Seattle’s notoriously polluted Duwamish River, an excavator scoops up small pieces of waste metal and slings them onto a rusty mountain at Seattle Iron & Metals Corp. A pile of flattened cars and trucks squats nearby amid vast sheets of scrap metal.

    Katie Campbell/EarthFix

    For at least four years, Seattle Iron & Metals has dumped more pollutants into Seattle's polluted Duwamish River than allowed under the Clean Water Act, government records show.

    For at least the last four years, this auto-shredder and metal recycler has dumped more pollutants into the river than allowed under the federal Clean Water Act, government records show. The levels have ranged higher than 250 times above what’s known to harm salmon that migrate through the river.

    The company, which declined to comment for this story, has reported its violations to the government, as required by law. But instead of punishing the metal recycler, the Washington Department of Ecology encouraged the company to reduce its pollution levels. The agency also searched for a legal way to make Seattle Iron & Metals’ pollution limits more lenient, and says it plans to relax them soon.

    The Seattle Iron & Metals story is emblematic of widespread failures in the nation’s efforts to end the toxic pollution that modern life has unleashed on America’s rivers, lakes and bays. The Clean Water Act, passed by a large bipartisan majority of Congress 40 years ago, was intended to eliminate water pollution by 1985. Congress declared: “It is the national policy that the discharge of toxic pollutants in toxic amounts be prohibited.”

    Yet in the Pacific Northwest, as across the nation, the Clean Water Act has fallen far short of its goals. A majority of Northwest waterways fail to meet federally approved water-quality standards. An investigation by EarthFix and InvestigateWest reveals:

    • Whole categories of polluters are effectively exempt from penalties when they dump pollutants illegally. This affects thousands of facilities.
    • Violations of the Clean Water Act in the Northwest occur routinely, yet citations and financial penalties are relatively rare.
    • Government bodies are among the most prolific violators, especially those that manage aging sewage-treatment plants and stormwater pipes that dump polluted rainwater runoff directly into waterways.

    Read more, and see an interactive map of Clean Water Act penalties in the Pacific Northwest.


    Follow Open Channel from NBC News on Twitter and Facebook.


    2 comments

    Until people realize that we have 1 atmosphere and engaging in trade with countries who pollute way more than us, while criminalizing and harming businesses here that have to compete with countries like China, I will not be for more regulations. But hell, we have clean water regulations for a reason …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: environment, environmental-protection-agency, clean-water-act, investigatewest

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