September 14th, 2017 by Meteor Blades

Originally published on Red Green & Blue.

By Meteor Blades

A federal appeals court Monday granted the Trump regime’s request to stop implementation of an Obama era Environmental Protection Agency plan requiring new pollution controls at two of the nation’s oldest and dirtiest coal-fired power plants in Utah.

The plan was designed as part of the EPA’s “regional haze rule” promulgated under the 1990 Clean Air Act amendments. The rule itself, dating back to 1999, is an attempt to reduce visible pollution at U.S. national parks, national monuments, and wilderness areas that is created as a byproduct of burning fossil fuels, particularly coal, to generate electricity and for industrial purposes.

In addition to the visibility issues in scenic areas, particulates making up the haze are linked to increased respiratory illness, decreased lung function, and premature death.

States were allowed to come up with their own compliance plans. But many did a half-assed job of it, kowtowing to utilities in several states. So the EPA stepped in with plans of their own.

But the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals okayed Pruitt’s request to halt a lawsuit initiated by Rocky Mountain Power against the EPA to give the agency time to revise its plan requiring new equipment to be installed to cut nitrogen oxide emissions at two Utah coal plants.

Sen. Mike Lee and Rep. Jason Chaffetz of Utah’s Republican delegation to Congress, who introduced legislation in March to trash the plan, are elated by the federal retreat. Environmental advocacy groups, on the other hand, are disappointed but not surprised to see EPA administrator Scott Pruitt choose to revise the plan, which requires rejecting the agency’s own research showing that it would cut haze at Utah’s Arches and Canyonlands national parks, as well as other public lands in the state, including some designated as protected under the Wilderness Act. Pruitt informed Utah officials in July that he was going to reconsider the plan.

In response six months ago to the Lee-Chaffetz legislation:

“The science and the facts here is just mindbogglingly complicated,” says Arnold Reitze, a University of Utah law professor who serves on Utah’s Air Quality Board. “It was a close call. And now we have Congress, which has no technical expertise in the subject, weighing in and throwing their weight around.”