Current:Home > ContactOzone, Mercury, Ash, CO2: Regulations Take on Coal’s Dirty Underside -Wealth Navigators Hub
Ozone, Mercury, Ash, CO2: Regulations Take on Coal’s Dirty Underside
View
Date:2025-04-24 19:34:11
When the EPA tightened the national standard for ozone pollution last week, the coal industry and its allies saw it as a costly, unnecessary burden, another volley in what some have called the war on coal.
Since taking office in 2009, the Obama administration has released a stream of regulations that affect the coal industry, and more are pending. Many of the rules also apply to oil and gas facilities, but the limits they impose on coal’s prodigious air and water pollution have helped hasten the industry’s decline.
Just seven years ago, nearly half the nation’s electricity came from coal. It fell to 38 percent in 2014, and the number of U.S. coal mines is now at historic lows.
The combination of these rules has been powerful, said Pat Parenteau, a professor at Vermont Law School, but they don’t tell the whole story. Market forces—particularly the growth of natural gas and renewable energy—have “had more to do with coal’s demise than these rules,” he said.
Below is a summary of major coal-related regulations finalized by the Obama administration:
Most of the regulations didn’t originate with President Barack Obama, Parenteau added. “My view is, Obama just happened to be here when the law caught up with coal. I don’t think this was part of his election platform,” he said.
Many of the rules have been delayed for decades, or emerged from lawsuits filed before Obama took office. Even the Clean Power Plan—the president’s signature regulation limiting carbon dioxide emissions from power plants—was enabled by a 2007 lawsuit that ordered the EPA to treat CO2 as a pollutant under the Clean Air Act.
Eric Schaeffer, executive director of the Environmental Integrity Project, a nonprofit advocacy group, said the rules correct exemptions that have allowed the coal industry to escape regulatory scrutiny, in some cases for decades.
For instance, the EPA first proposed to regulate coal ash in 1978. But a 1980 Congressional amendment exempted the toxic waste product from federal oversight, and it remained that way until December 2014.
“If you can go decades without complying…[then] if there’s a war on coal, coal won,” Schaeffer said.
Parenteau took a more optimistic view, saying the special treatment coal has enjoyed is finally being changed by lawsuits and the slow grind of regulatory action.
“Coal does so much damage to public health and the environment,” Parenteau said. “It’s remarkable to see it all coming together at this point in time. Who would’ve thought, 10 years ago, we’d be talking like this about King Coal?”
veryGood! (24422)
Related
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Inside Carolyn Bessette's Final Days: Heartbreaking Revelations About Her Life With John F. Kennedy Jr.
- 'Abbott Elementary' is ready for summer break: How to watch the season 3 finale
- The Best Banana Republic Factory Deals To Score ASAP Before Memorial Day: $17 Linen Shorts & More
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Camila Cabello Shares How She Lost Her Virginity
- Clark signs multiyear deal with Wilson Sporting Goods for signature basketball line
- Michigan county refused to certify vote, prompting fears of a growing election threat this fall
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Storms have dropped large hail, buckets of rain and tornados across the Midwest. And more is coming.
Ranking
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Demi Moore talks full-frontal nudity scenes in Cannes-premiered horror movie 'The Substance'
- Bachelor Nation's Rachel Nance Details Receiving Racist Comments on Social Media
- What Each Zodiac Sign Needs for Gemini Season, According to Your Horoscope
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Cristiano Ronaldo, 39, to play for Portugal in his sixth UEFA Euro Championship
- EPA urges water utilities to protect nation's drinking water amid heightened cyberattacks
- AI is tutoring and teaching some students, reshaping the classroom landscape
Recommendation
Could your smelly farts help science?
Father says the 10-year-old child swept into a storm drain in Tennessee after severe storms has died
Victoria Monét drops out of June music festival appearances due to 'health issues'
At five hour hearing, no one is happy with Texas Medical Board’s proposed abortion guidance
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Hawaii installing new cameras at women’s prison after $2 million settlement over sex assaults
Pedigree dog food recall affects hundreds of bags in 4 states. See if you're among them.
Below Deck's Capt. Kerry Slams Bosun Ben's Blatant Disrespect During Explosive Confrontation