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AG Kilmartin Urges U.S. Supreme Court to Uphold EPA's Rule to Reduce Toxic Air Pollutant Emissions

Rhode Island Joins Coalition of States in Defending EPA'S Rule to Reduce Mercury and Other Harmful Emissions that Endanger Children and Public Health

Attorney General Peter F. Kilmartin today issued the following statement as the U.S. Supreme Court hears oral arguments concerning a challenge to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Mercury and Air Toxics Standards (MATS) rule.

"Toxic air pollutants, such as mercury from fossil fuel-fired power plants, cause serious health impacts, particularly in Rhode Island. These facilities are the largest source of mercury emissions, which ultimately end up in our water and can sicken people through the consumption of contaminated fish. Until now there have been no federal standards that require power plants to limit their emissions of toxic air pollutants like mercury, arsenic and metals, despite the availability of proven control technologies, and the more than 20 years since the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments passed, mandating this regulation," said Attorney General Peter Kilmartin.

BACKGROUND: Attorney General Kilmartin joins 15 other states, as well as the District of Columbia, and the cities of Baltimore, Chicago, New York City, and Erie County, New York, in defending EPA's long-overdue standards to reduce mercury and other hazardous air pollutant emissions from coal and oil-fired electric power plants, an important step to protect the public from harmful exposure to mercury, in particular children and women of child-bearing age. The other states joining Rhode Island are California, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, and Vermont.

On Feb. 25, 2015, the states joined in filing of a multistate Supreme Court brief in support of the MATS rule. Issued in 2012, the MATS rule will reduce power-plant mercury emissions by 75 percent in 2015, and will substantially cut emissions of other toxic metals, fine particulate matter, and acid gases, through the implementation of pollution-control technology already widely used in the electric power industry. These pollutants pose serious health harms including neurological damage, cancer, and acute and chronic respiratory diseases.

Various industry groups – including the National Mining Association and the Utility Air Regulatory Group – along with a number of states, challenged the MATS rule in federal appeals court. The states intervened in that challenge and argued in support of EPA on behalf of the coalition of states and local governments supporting the MATS rule.

In April 2014, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia upheld the MATS rule and the validity of EPA's determination that regulation of hazardous air pollutant emissions from electric power plants is "appropriate and necessary."

In November 2014, the Supreme Court agreed to hear petitions filed by the same industry groups and a coalition of states that argued EPA had erred by focusing on public health impacts and not considering costs when first deciding whether it was appropriate to regulate hazardous air pollution from power plants at all. The states argue that EPA properly considered the costs of regulating toxic power-plant emissions when it established the technology-based emission standards that the MATS rule requires power plants to meet. Further, the states argue that EPA is not required to consider costs at the threshold point of deciding whether to regulate. The brief also argues that, as a practical matter, power plants, using readily-available, cost-effective control technologies, have successfully complied with mercury reduction requirements currently in place in a number of states that typically are more stringent than the proposed MATS rule, without adverse economic effects or impacts on electric system reliability. Mercury is a potent neurotoxin that poses serious danger to people, especially to developing fetuses and children, and to wildlife. When airborne mercury from power plants is deposited into the water, it can change into methylmercury, a highly toxic form of mercury that accumulates in the food chain, in particular in fish. Children exposed to methylmercury consumed by their mothers during pregnancy can suffer lifelong adverse developmental effects. Currently, all 50 states have fish consumption advisories in place related to mercury contamination.

As a sector, electric power plants are the largest source of mercury emissions and other hazardous air pollutants in the United States – emitting hundreds of thousands of tons of those pollutants each year. EPA estimates that the MATS rule will prevent up to 11,000 premature deaths each year, and that the monetized health benefits of the rule will range from $37 to $90 billion annually, meaning that for every $1 spent by electric power plants to reduce toxic air emissions, the public will receive $3 to $9 in health benefits.

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