The following is a press release from the Sierra Club:
Agency
Takes Important First Step to Protect Air Quality and Public Health
The EPA’s
New Source Performance Standards (NSPS) and National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAPS) will benefit the health of Americans and our
environment in many ways. The updated
standards will result in major reductions in emissions of volatile organic
compounds (VOCs), toxic benzene and methane, a highly potent contributor to
climate disruption. These pollutants are known to cause asthma attacks,
hospital admissions, emergency room visits, cancer and even premature death.
The
measure will also benefit the gas industry –EPA projects that capturing more
methane and other gasses to send to market will save an estimated $30 million
annually.
Today’s
announcement by the EPA is a major step forward. However, the two-year delay in reducing
pollution from wellheads is an unnecessary setback because industry can meet
those standards now. The environmental
community is committed to working with EPA to strengthen the public health and
air quality safeguards to protect families who live near existing fracking
sites.
The EPA
proposed the updated safeguards in July 2011. Since the proposal, environmental
groups submitted more than 156,000 comments and turned out hundreds of
supporters of strong standards to hearings in Pittsburgh ,
PA , Denver , CO,
and Arlington , TX .
In
response to EPA’s announcement, environmental leaders released the following
statements:
“EPA
Administrator Lisa Jackson is taking an important first step in closing
loopholes for the natural gas industry and addressing dangerous air quality
levels in and near frack-fields across the country,” said Michael Brune,
Executive Director of the Sierra Club.
“The natural gas industry dumps massive amounts of air pollutants into
our air every day, sickening families and children. An industry that touts its ability to
efficiently drill thousands of wells thousands of feet into the earth is crying
wolf when it claims it can’t build enough tanks to capture wellhead
pollution. It’s time we clean up the
natural gas industry’s dirty and reckless practices.”
"From
Colorado to Pennsylvania , the gas industry is making a
killing from drilling, and at the very least they should cut dirty and
dangerous air pollution that threatens our families’ health,” said John
Rumpler, senior attorney for Environment America. “EPA’s action today is a breath of fresh air
for every man, woman, and child living in the shadow of the gas drilling boom.”
“Left to
its own devices, the oil and gas industry has turned the clear skies over Wyoming as smoggy as the car-choked highways of Los Angeles . For decades,
industry had a free pollution pass. Thanks to a court victory, that changes
today,” said Earthjustice President Trip Van Noppen. “There is more work to be
done to protect Americans living near oil and gas fields from cancer and other
unacceptable health threats, but this rule from EPA is an important first
step.”
“The
stories of families hurt by gas drilling’s air pollution were essential to the
adoption of these new public health safeguards,” said Bruce Baizel, senior
attorney for Earthworks. “Hopefully this much-needed first step will soon be
expanded to better protect the families that illustrated the need for the new rules
in the first place.”
"These
important rules start to cut down on air pollution that harms people living
near wells, creates smog, and warms the climate," said David McCabe,
senior scientist with Clean Air Task Force. "They are a solid start, but
we need to keep working to reduce pollution from the gas industry all the way
from the well to the customer. People who live near compressors and equipment
already in use need to see their air cleaned up as well. Unfortunately these
rules won't do that."
“Our members
in Pennsylvania , Texas ,
and Colorado
have suffered because state regulators haven’t acted to control oil and gas
operations, so these standards are a win-win-win,” said Lynn Thorp, Clean Water
Action National Campaigns Director. “They protect people from air pollution,
help curb climate change and save the industry money. People expect the federal
government to use their authority to protect their health, their drinking water
and the air they breathe and this is a good first step.”
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