Texas industries worry about EPA crackdown
Published: October 14, 2009
Tags: Clean Air Act, ConocoPhillips, Environmental Protection Agency, Exxon Mobil Corp., Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club, Texas Chemical Council, Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, Texas Oil And Gas Association
John McFarland
AP Writer
Dallas (AP) — For 15 years, environmentalists have complained that state regulations have allowed the powerful oil and chemical industries to skirt Clean Air Act standards in Texas, the nation’s foremost producer of industrial air pollution.
But the Environmental Protection Agency last month scrapped several aspects of the state’s air-pollution permitting program, including “flexible” permits that have allowed about 140 plants and refineries to exceed toxic emissions limits in the short term as long as they complied with overall federal averages in the long term.
Federal regulators say the move, set to take effect next year, is designed to cut toxic emissions and bring Texas in line with the Clean Air Act. And environmental groups say it will help improve the state’s ecology and the health of Texans and those living nearby.
Industry groups, however, warn that getting rid of the state program in favor of more rigid standards will hurt industries crucial to the Texas economy, and that the costs of compliance may hit consumers.
“If there is a cost associated with it, it is very likely that it could cost the consumer more,” said Debbie Hastings, vice president for environmental affairs for the Texas Oil And Gas Association, whose members provide about 25 percent of the nation’s gasoline supply and include industry giants including Exxon Mobil Corp. and ConocoPhillips.
It’s too early to know precisely how the rules will change or how much it will cost, but there’s worry in the heavy industries that billow tons of toxins but employ thousands of people and pay billions in state and local taxes. Texas has more oil refineries and chemical plants than any other state, and the permit ruling comes as Gov. Rick Perry and industry officials are railing against a climate bill pending in Congress.
Plants could be forced to spend millions of dollars to upgrade pollution control equipment. Industry groups say that in turn could jack up the prices of gas, tires, carpet, upholstery and other products that pass through Texas factories.
“The prices have to keep up with the cost of doing business,” said Mike Meroney, a spokesman for Texas Chemical Council, which represents about 80 companies with 200 sites that produce the state’s leading export. “Every site’s different — it could be very, very costly.”
States are required to enforce the Clean Air Act, but they’re given some flexibility in how to do it. The EPA approved Texas’ major clean-air permitting plan in 1992, and the state has since submitted more than 30 regulatory changes.
The EPA issued its ruling last month as a result of a lawsuit settlement that forced the agency to approve or disapprove aspects of the Texas permitting process, agency spokesman Dave Bary said. The EPA said no other state offered polluters such flexibility, and cited problems with the permit program’s enforcement, monitoring and record keeping, among other reasons.
The EPA held its first meeting last week with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, which issues the permits, to work on getting the program into compliance. The commission’s executive director, Mark Vickery, said the state permit rules have helped cut down on pollution and said the agency would work with the EPA to resolve the problems. The agencies are working through a 60-day comment period before the rules become final next year.
Neil Carman, an air specialist with the Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club who spent years as an industrial plant inspector with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, said he’s certain ending the state permitting program will cut emissions. He said it will prove costly to the companies, but not as costly as treating long-term health problems caused by toxic emissions.
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T.E.A. says:Posted on 10/16/09 at 7:07 am
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[...] OMFG you call “the nation’s foremost producer of industrial air pollution” an environmental [...]
Posted on 02/19/10 at 2:08 am
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Reality check: There is a tipping point, and for many companies this will push them over, or be dangerously close. That is, before they’ll spend all this money on unattainable emission regulations, they’ll move the company out of the country. (where, by the way they don’t have them, and how does that help ‘global Warming’?…I guess it must not actually be ‘global’) At the very least, they will take severe cost cutting measures resulting in major job-loss, or lay offs. This is a shining example of where the phrase “sacrificing the economy at the altar of global warming’ comes from. The devastating unintended consequences of radical environmentalism are unfolding before our very eyes. There are common sense things than can, and are already being done to reduce polluting emissions, that are realistic, sensible, and don’t kill off industry. By the way, this is just the Clean Air Act…just wait till they ram through Cap and Trade…that, will be the death blow to industry, and inflate everyones cost of living to unimaginable levels.