EPA Releases Rule To Close Clean Air Act Loopholes For Industrial Polluters

Good step in the right direction for the EPA's work to protect communities

2015-05-26

The EPA on Friday released a rule that requires states to close Clean Air Act loopholes for industrial facilities such as refineries. The EPA’s rule on Friday builds on two cases Earthjustice won (representing a coalition of national, regional, and local environmental organizations, including Sierra Club), back in 2008 and 2014. The first case told EPA that it couldn’t exempt large industrial pollution sources such as refineries from meeting protective standards when they start up, shutdown, or malfunction. The second case told EPA that it couldn’t create a junior-varsity version of that exemption—an ‘affirmative defense’ that let sources off the hook for paying penalties if they said their violations occurred because of ‘malfunctions.’

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An oil refinery looms over the west side of Port Arthur, TX.

As part of responding to citizen petitions asking it to eliminate illegal exemptions, EPA proposed to follow those cases and require states to take out exemptions, including the ‘affirmative defense,’ from their state implementation plans, which establish standards big sources of air pollution like refineries must meet. On May 22, EPA finalized its action and required that those exemptions be eliminated from state plans.

The following is a statement from Earthjustice attorney Seth Johnson:

“Communities depend on meaningful, enforceable standards to protect them against harmful air pollution. By taking action to close illegal loopholes in state plans, EPA’s taken an important step toward protecting communities’ health and bolstering their important right to protect themselves against the noxious air pollution that burdens them. But many similar loopholes still remain in the EPA’s national Clean Air Act standards. We urge the EPA to finally close them.”

Source: Earthjustice