ENVIRONMENT
REPORT - Pollution Rule Eased for Older Power Plants
By Caty Weaver
This is the VOA Special English Environment Report.
The administration of President Bush has eased
an air pollution rule for about seventeen-thousand older power stations
and factories. Operators will have greater freedom to make changes without
the need to add pollution control equipment.
The administration eased a rule established
in a law called the Clean Air Act. Environmental groups say the new
rule will damage the environment and threaten public health. They also
accuse the Bush administration of acting to please its political supporters
in the energy industry. The acting administrator of the Environmental
Protection Agency, Marianne Horinko, signed the new rule. She says it
will increase fairness and dependability. She says it will not affect
the protections of the Clean Air Act. President Bush's nominee to head
the E-P-A, Utah Governor Mike Leavitt, awaits confirmation by the Senate.
Industry officials said the old rule was unclear
about when operators had to add pollution controls while making changes.
The new rule is based on the cost of repairs, replacements or improvements
to production equipment. This will be true even if the changes increase
pollution. But the pollution still has to remain within current limits.
Industry officials say operators will now be
able to make improvements that had been too costly under the past requirements.
The energy industry say such work will make power stations cleaner,
and this will be good for the environment. Energy producers say electric
service will also be less costly and more dependable. Last month a huge
power outage affected New York City and other parts of the eastern United
States and Canada.
But the attorney general of New York State,
Eliot Spitzer, calls the new rule illegal. He says it means Americans
will breathe dirtier air and get more lung diseases. And he says it
will increase environmental damage. Mister Spitzer said he would fight
the change in court.
The head of the American Lung Association, John
Kirkwood, also condemned the new rule. He says huge amounts of scientific
study have shown that air pollution causes health problems. He said
E-P-A policy should be based on protecting public health, not improving
industry profits.
This VOA Special English Environment Report
was written by Caty Weaver.
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