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Comment
Period Ends March 30 on Proposed For
more information: Released,
“If
this proposed regulation is approved, there will be dramatic improvements in air
quality and steep drops in acid rain in a very short period of time, in the 29
states ranging from the Mississippi River Valley to the Atlantic Coast,” said
Adirondack Council staff Counsel Bernard C. Melewski. “By the end of this
decade, the amount of acid rain falling on the “EPA
projects that by 2030, the number of The
Interstate Air Quality Rule contains cuts nearly identical to those proposed by
US Rep. John Sweeney, "The
new Interstate Air Quality Rule shows the EPA is taking acid rain
seriously," said US Rep. Sweeney. "We urge the public to let the EPA
know how important this issue is to upstate "The
Administration's proposed regulations are a huge step in the right direction for
Northern and “The
seriousness of health related risks created by acid rain stands alone,” said
Howie Cushing, President of the New York State Conservation Council, Inc. “As
for the damage created to our fisheries and wildlife, which will continue to
cause a loss of cultural and historical events such as hunting and fishing, and
an economic loss to an over $2 billion dollar business in New York, we must
strive to reduce, and if possible stop, acid rain causing conditions.” Sweeney
and McHugh represent districts that encompass all of the six-million-acre Aside
from destroying forests, killing fish and poisoning water and soul, acid rain
rapidly weathers buildings and monuments made from marble, limestone, copper and
bronze. In a rainfall with a pH of 4.5 or less (the current average for upstate The
EPA’s proposed Interstate Air Quality Rule was proposed in response to a
health threat from the same smokestack pollution that causes acid rain (sulfur
dioxide and nitrogen oxide). Nitrogen oxides create ground level ozone (smog).
Tiny sulfur dioxide particles smaller then the diameter of a human hair lodge in
human lungs. Both can cause and worsen lung diseases. The
cuts contained in the Interstate Air Quality Rule are also similar to those
proposed by the Bush Administration in the Clear Skies Act. However, the
regulation would achieve those cuts three years sooner. Unlike Clear Skies, the
proposed regulation would not repeal other sections of the Clean Air Act. Congress
was due to take up the Clear Skies legislation at the end of 2003, but wrangling
over the Energy Bill and other issues pushed it off the calendar. With a
Presidential and Congressional Election in 2004 it became clear that the chances
for quick passage of a regulatory bill were poor. EPA
Administrator Leavitt proposed the rule in December 2003. Public hearings were
held in late February in The
Interstate Air Quality Rule would require power plants in the 29 affected states
to reduce their sulfur dioxide emissions by 71 percent and nitrogen oxide
emissions by 65 percent, both by 2015. The companies would make the reductions
using the same cap-and-trade program already in effect nationwide for sulfur
dioxide. “If
all goes well, this regulation could be finalized by this fall,” Melewski
said. “That would be the culmination of 30 years or persistent, hard work by
the Adirondack Council since acid rain was first discovered here in the 1970s.
For as long as this organization has existed, since May of 1975, we have been
fighting acid rain. “It
will be an enormous relief to finally see the light at the end of this very long
tunnel,” he said. “Acid rain is clearly the most destructive threat the Park
has faced since the last ice age. So much of our time and attention has been
tied up by fighting it. It will be a joy to redirect some of that energy into
the other important threats to the Park’s ecology.”
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