Valley Watch hails Indiana Governor’s decision on saying no to Posey County fertilizer plant

July 1, 2013-UPDATE: The Governor had a change of heart and now the Posey County Council has issued the necessary bonds and the county will now host a company that has ties to the Afghanistan Taliban which is proven to use their product to kill and maim American troops. 

May 17, 2013- The following is a press release issued today in response to the decision by Governor Mike Pence to stop State financial support for a Pakistani company implicated in supplying explosive materials used against American troops in Afghanistan.

This internet photo shows a Fatima fertilizer plant as it exists in Pakistan. Today, indiana Governor, Mike Pence stopped plans by Posey County economic development officials to build what they called a $2 billion plant to make fertilizer. Valley Watch objected to the siting of the facility as being in too close proximity to another explosive plant, the second largest ethanol plant in the US, operated by Aventine Renewable Energy.

This internet photo shows a Fatima fertilizer plant as it exists in Pakistan. Today, indiana Governor, Mike Pence stopped plans by Posey County economic development officials to build what they called a $2 billion plant to make fertilizer. Valley Watch objected to the siting of the facility as being in too close proximity to another explosive plant, the second largest ethanol plant in the US, operated by Aventine Renewable Energy.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Valley Watch applauds the decision by Indiana Governor Mike Pence to stop State financial support to the Pakistani company who was trying to build a giant fertilizer plant in Posey County. Governor Pence wisely discerned that the widely reported connection between the company and the manufacture of Improvised Explosive Devices in Afghanistan was more than Hoosier veterans should have to put up with just for some promised jobs.

Valley Watch had previously called for a “moratorium” on the construction of new Indiana fertilizer manufacturers until adequate safety assessments could be in place to determine the feasibility of locating such facilities so near to other facilities that have severe explosive potential. In the case of Posey County, it was proposed that Fatima be placed adjacent to the second largest ethanol plant in the US. The combined plants’  potential for a major catastrophe needed better assessment that the diligence given by local economic development officials who seemed nearly overwhelmed by their support for Fatima.

Valley Watch suggests that in the future, decisions like this should be given more public scrutiny and transparency before dangerous and essentially unvetted proposals are given the green light. Citizens of southwest Indiana deserve more from self appointed economic development regimes.

The Fatima proposal would have been build just east of Aventine's second largest ethanol plant in the US as shown here in this file photo from 2011. © John Blair

The Fatima proposal would have been build just east of Aventine’s second largest ethanol plant in the US as shown here in this file photo from 2011. © John Blair

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Leucadia/Indiana Gasification suspends Rockport activity

The fate of the Indiana Gasification project is now apparently in the hands of the Indiana Supreme Court where Leucadia Project Manager is friendly with at least one of the Justices. See: http://www.in.gov/judiciary/citc/files/massa-lubbers.pdf

The fate of the Indiana Gasification project is now apparently in the hands of the Indiana Supreme Court where Leucadia Project Manager is friendly with at least one of the Justices. See: http://www.in.gov/judiciary/citc/files/massa-lubbers.pdf
Photo © 2013 John Blair

April 30, 2013-Statement of Mark Lubbers, Indiana project director for Leucadia’s Indiana Gasification proposal

If the Supreme Court takes the case, the Ct of Appeals decision is immediately vacated, so the IURC approval is again live.  The Ct of Appeals opinion was not unanimous and we have asked the court to side with Chief Judge Robb’s dissent, which said that the Court could have upheld the IURC approval and dealt separately with the definition problem.  Since then, of course, the parties have dealt with that admittedly inartful definition language by deleting the offending 37 words from the definition of Retail End Use Customer; so the problem identified by the Ct of Appeals no longer exists.

If the Supreme Court takes the case, we think we have a good chance of winning.

If the Supreme Court does not take the case, the project is dead.  The legislature and the governor knew this when they opted for the language in the law just-passed.  There was an alternative way for the IURC to have a “final look” at the project to consider if the contract was still good for ratepayers given supposed changes in the energy market.  That alternative was rejected in favor of adopting new standards that the legislature and the governor knew would kill the project.  (Because it would require a different contract and two years of review that the project cannot sustain.) The decision to take this path was a conscious decision to kill the project.

Since this conscious decision was made, the judgment of the state is very clear: neither the legislature nor the governor support the contract or the project.  Therefore, the claim made by legislative leadership and the governor that everything is fine if the Supreme Court sides with us is a false promise; no one would invest  $750 million where such clear opposition from the government is evident.  The institutions that provide the capital to build a plant of this size will not do business in a state that is so cavalier about the $20+ million dollars we have already invested.

We will finish the judicial review that has been going on now since December 2011.  We will file today a motion for the Court to schedule oral argument.  We will work hard for a win if the Supreme Court takes the case.  If we win, however, only a clear reversal of position by the Governor would enable the project to go forward.

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HUGE VICTORY-Legislature requires accountability for Leucadia, Valley Watch responds

 April 27, 2013- by John Blair, valleywatch.net editor

BIRD W: ADDRESSWhat happened in the legislature tonight was something extraordinary. Citizens came together to turn legislative direction, 180º on the Rockport Gasification fiasco.

Think about it. Vectren, the Indiana Chamber of Commerce, Farm Bureau all came together with environmentalists and consumers to stop something ridiculous form going any further.

For Valley Watch, like both the Marble Hill Nuclear Plant and Peabody’s Thoroughbred coal plant in Muhlenberg Couty, KY, this fight has been seven long years.

Frankly, I was expecting much closer votes in both chambers but was really surprised at the House vote of 70-28.  But Suzanne Crouch successfully carried the bill with grace and intelligence, informing legislators clearly and accurately about its contents at a late hour.

Valley Watch has worked closely with Vectren on this fight, so has the Hoosier Chapter of the Sierra Club for which I serve as Energy Chair. Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal Campaign came in at just the right moment and provided a huge level of grassroots support, generating phone calls and letters to legislators throughout the session. Instrumental in this effort was a dedicated Rockport group called Spencer County Citizens for Quality of Life. The unbelievably talented staff at the Citizens Action Coalition performed numerous services as professionally as any lobbyist there. So did Sierra’s lobbyist Mark St. John.

However, the issue is not finished. There is still the matter of the Supreme Court appeal and what they decide will determine the outcome. If the IURC does review the contract with the instructions from the legislature to insure savings during the term of the contract, Leucadia says they will walk away. But, they seem to never give up their quest to socialize their risk at the expense of consumers.

Already Rockport, Indiana sees annual toxic emissions of more than 30 million pounds from AK Steel and AEP's Rockport plant. Now, Governor Mitch Daniels and others want to see those emissions increase while also increasing winter heating expenses for Hoosiers through the construction of the proposed Indiana Gasification facility. Photo © 2011 John Blair

Already Rockport, Indiana sees annual toxic emissions of more than 30 million pounds from AK Steel and AEP’s Rockport plant. Now, Governor Mitch Daniels and others want to see those emissions increase while also increasing winter heating expenses for Hoosiers through the construction of the proposed Indiana Gasification facility. Photo © 2011 John Blair

Valley Watch has been an intervenor in the IURC proceeding and we are appellants now before the Supreme Court. We certainly will not back down now. We also intend to fight the plant’s proposed loan guarantee by the Federal Government. In fact, we have been doing that since 2009.

Not only is this proposal a financial disaster, it is also a terrible environmental justice issue since Rockport is already one of the most polluted towns on earth according to EPA’s Toxic Release Inventory. Their pollution and health burden is already too high. The loan guarantee coupled with forcing Hoosier consumers to purchase their product is far removed from anything considered “Free Enterprise.”

We feel that we will prevail for no other reason than it just makes sense to let this thing go. But we have multiple issues with which to continue our fight should Leucadia decide to stay the course.

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Tim DeChristopher, Champion of Climate Movement, Released on Eve of Earth Day

April 22, 2013-by Lauren McCauley on the website Common Dreams

Pioneering environmental activist Tim DeChristopher was released from jail on Sunday—one day before Earth Day—after serving two years for disrupting an “illegal” Bush administration auction of oil and gas exploitation rights of pristine public lands in southeastern Utah.

Tim DeChristopher, one of America's young environmental heroes served two years in jail for throwing a monkey wrench in the bidding process for rights to lease oil lands from the Bureau of Land Management, part of the Department of the Interior. His detention was little more than being a political prisoner in his own country.

Tim DeChristopher, one of America’s young environmental heroes served two years in jail for throwing a monkey wrench in the bidding process for rights to lease oil lands from the Bureau of Land Management, part of the Department of the Interior. His detention was little more than being a political prisoner in his own country.

After being released, DeChristopher said Monday in an exclusive interview withDemocracy Now! that in retrospect he was “even more glad that [he] did it.”

DeChristopher’s example of civil disobedience helped catalyze a movement that, up until that point, relied predominantly on the Big Green groups that resided “in the Washington bubble,” as he told Democracy Now!. Citing examples such as Occupy Wall Street and the Tar Sands Blockade, DeChristopher added that the climate movement “has made a lot of progress in the past four years.”

“He thought the movement already had the numbers it needed to succeed, if people would step up and act—with the belief that their actions would propel more people into motion and build the movement’s numbers,” writes YES Magazine’sMelanie Jan Martin.

Below is DeChristopher’s interview with Democracy Now!

DeChristopher “was and is a complete inspiration to all of us. His courage permeated everyone’s thinking,” added 350.org founder Bill McKibben.

On December 19, 2008, DeChristopher—in a last minute decision—took part in a Bureau of Land Management auction of leases to drill on public lands. Brandishing the Bidder 70 paddle, he amassed rights to a total of 22,500 acres at at the price of $1.8 million, effectively safeguarding parcels surrounding Utah’s Arches and Canyonlands National Parks from drilling.

Though the incoming Obama administration invalidated the auction two months later and despite DeChristopher raising the requisite funds to actually purchase the land parcels, officials continued with his prosecution of and in July of 2011 he was sentenced to two years in federal prison.

Prior to his sentencing, DeChristopher read a 35-minute closing statement to the court: “You can steer my commitment to a healthy and just world if you agree with it, but you can’t kill it. This is not going away. At this point of unimaginable threats on the horizon, this is what hope looks like. In these times of a morally bankrupt government that has sold out its principles, this is what patriotism looks like. With countless lives on the line, this is what love looks like, and it will only grow.”

To celebrate both DeChristopher’s release and the 43rd annual Earth Day, Peaceful Uprising, the climate justice group he co-founded , has organized nationwide community screenings of the documentary feature “Bidder 70” which chronicles how DeChristopher’s example of civil disobedience inspired a resurgence in the climate justice movement.

Following the film, DeChristopher will take part in an hour long Q & A that will be streamed live to over 50 different venues.

You can see times and locations of the Earth Day screenings here.

 

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Valley Watch calls for moratorium on fertilizer plants in SW Indiana until safety site assessments are complete

BIRD W: ADDRESS

For Immediate Release: April 19, 2013, 12:OO PM Contact: John Blair @ 812-464-5663

Valley Watch calls for immediate moratorium and re-assessment of siting criteria for locating fertilizer plants in SW Indiana

While our sympathies go out to the victims of the tragedy in the town of West, Texas on Wednesday night, that tragedy underscores the necessity for siting giant industrial scale fertilizer manufacturing plants in the safest, most common sense fashion, away from other explosive hazards and concentrations of people, be they workers or residents.

In southwest Indiana, two $1 billion + ammonium nitrate plants are proposed, one in Rockport, and one in Mt. Vernon. In both cases, economic development officials have proposed sites that are immediately adjacent to plants that could exacerbate not only the destruction but also the human injuries and loos of life should an “industrial accident” like that this week occur in either location.

In Rockport, where IDEM has already issued a “draft” air and construction permit for a plant that is proposed to make 3,600 tons per day of ammonium nitrate, the risk is huge should something go wrong since it is proposed to be built adjacent to the controversial Indiana Gasification facility that is designed to manufacture synthetic “natural gas” from coal.

In Mt. Vernon, the risk of an accident increases greatly due to its proposed location adjacent to one the largest ethanol plants in the world, producing 110,000,000 gallons annually at full capacity.

Both of these facilities are dangerous on their own but the combination of ammonium nitrate and other explosive materials like ethanol and syngas increases the risk dramatically.

By scale alone, the proposals for southwest Indiana are giant compared to the plant that blew up in Texas on Wednesday. Ohio Valley Resources’ Rockport draft permit calls for ammonium nitrate manufacture of 3,600 tons per day, compared to the West plant of 4,771 tons per year.

Valley Watch’s purpose is “to protect the public health and environment of the lower Ohio River valley.” In that capacity, we are calling today for an immediate “moratorium and site re-assessment” on environmental permits and State and local tax and other incentives for both of these proposed plants. In the case of the Rockport proposal, IDEM has already issued a draft air permit and is scheduled to hold a public hearing on it on the Evening of May 15 at South Spencer High School.

At Mt. Vernon, the state has already issued some kind of tax exempt bonding authority amounting to $1.2 billion which we understand is currently “on hold” at the direction of Indiana Governor, Mike Pence who has serious questions about the owners of that proposal, a Pakistani company named Fatima, as they relate to the supply of ammonium nitrate used in the manufacture of Improvised Explosive Devices, IEDs by the Taliban against American troops in Afghanistan.

We will be seeking meetings with government officials including the Governor, public safety, environmental and local government executives to ask, indeed, demand that an moratorium and site safety assessment be made prior to allowing the location of these time bombs to be constructed. We hope that others will join our call for this moratorium and demand that public safety take precedent over the prospect of perceived economic growth of the region and if these must be built that they choose sites that take public safety as their first consideration. -30-

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Two $1 billion+ proposed fertilizer plants in SW Indiana dwarf the one that exploded in West, Texas on April 17. And, these are both proposed to be located adjacent to giant explosive facilities.

April 18, 2013-by John Blair, valleywatch.net editor

The West, Texas plant that blew up is minuscule compared to the proposals for two new ammonium nitrate plants in SW Indiana. Image: Google Earth

The West, Texas plant that blew up is minuscule compared to the proposals for two new ammonium nitrate plants in SW Indiana. Image: Google Earth

In the last few months, economic development officials in southwest Indiana have courted two giant, billion plus fertilizer plants. One is proposed west of Evansville at the Southwind Maritime Center in Mt. Vernon and the other is proposed for Rockport about twenty five miles east of Evansville. The size of the plant that blew up on April 17 pales in comparison to the two proposed.

Both of these communities are among the most toxic polluted towns in America already according to the US EPA’s Toxic Release Inventory.

But that is only where this story begins.

THe aftermath of a huge blast from a relatively small fertilizer plant in West, Texas. What if that plant had been located next to one of America's largest ethanol plants?

The aftermath of a huge blast from a relatively small fertilizer plant in West, Texas. What if that plant had been located next to one of America’s largest ethanol plants?

In Mt. Vernon the proposal calls for the plant to be developed adjacent to one of the largest ethanol refineries in the nation. At Rockport, the proposal calls for the plant to be located adjacent to another proposal called Indiana Gasification, which is designed to convert coal to various explosive materials, primarily synthetic natural gas.

Had the much smaller plant in West, Texas been located so close to another time bomb like a huge ethanol plant or a syngas plant, who knows how much damage would occur?

It is apparent to anyone who cares about safety that it is not a good idea to locate such a plant immediately next to a facility that is already a giant explosion and fire hazard but that matters little to SW indiana economic development officials or their counterparts in Indiana’s Department of Environmental Management (IDEM) since already IDEM has issued a Draft Air and Construction permit for the Rockport plant which goes by the name-Ohio Valley Resources Limited Liability Corporation.

In fact, a public hearing is slated for that permit on May 15, in the little town of Rockport at South Spencer High School. IDEM always issues permits they get to the draft stage but still locals will have an opportunity to voice their concerns.

In the thirty-two years Valley Watch has watched these things, we do not recall a single permit that has been denied. On occasion IDEM will be forced by citizens to add new conditions to a permit but they do not deny them as long as applicants dot their “i”s and cross their “t”s.

The Mt. Vernon proposal has some issues of its own. Not only is it proposed to be built next to an explosive ethanol plant, it is also being proposed by a Pakistani company that has been implicated in the supply of explosive ammonium nitrate to the Afghani Taliban for use in the manufacture of Improvised Explosive Devices used against American troops in the war in Afghanistan.

Interestingly, an Indiana agency named the Indiana Finance Authority has ties to both these endeavors. The IFA signed a thirty year contract with Indiana Gasification to buy most of the production of that plant and in turn will force Hoosier consumers to purchase that gas at a significant premium over the price of natural gas to heat their homes.

In the Mt. Vernon case, IFA authorized $1.2 Billion in tax exempt bonds for the Fatima Corporation to use for capital expenditures to build their plant at the Southwind port.

In both case, there was no public involvement allowed in the drafting of either the bond issue or the contract, although the contract was later approved by the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission which did allow for public input which is now the subject of an Supreme Court proceeding.

Valley Watch wil hold a press conference to discuss future actions it intends to take on April 18 and we will report on that on this web site.

 

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Full Moon Silhouettes from New Zealand-for your viewing and photographic edification

April 11, 2013-by Mark Gee

Full Moon Silhouettes from Mark Gee on Vimeo.

Full Moon Silhouettes is a real time video of the moon rising over the Mount Victoria Lookout in Wellington, New Zealand. People had gathered up there this night to get the best view possible of the moon rising. I captured the video from 2.1km away on the other side of the city. It’s something that I’ve been wanting to photograph for a long time now, and a lot of planning and failed attempts had taken place. Finally, during moon rise on the 28th January 2013, everything fell into place and I got my footage.
The video is as it came off the memory card and there has been no manipulation whatsoever. Technically it was quite a challenge to get the final result. I shot it on a Canon ID MkIV in video mode with a Canon EF 500mm f/4L and a Canon 2x extender II, giving me the equivalent focal length of 1300mm.
Music – Tenderness by Dan Phillipson : premiumbeat.com/royalty_free_music/songs/tenderness

markg.com.au
facebook.com/markgphoto
markg.com.au/2013/01/full-moon-silhouettes/

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Noted Republican tells Indiana legislature to ditch “AgGag” bill

April 2, 2013-by Leigh DeNoon, Public News Service-Indiana

An Indiana University law professor is questioning the constitutionality of Indiana’s so-called Ag-Gag bill, a measure supporters claim will protect farmers from exploitation by activist groups.

Senate Bill 373 will be heard next on the floor of the Indiana House after passing a committee with a major amendment last Thursday. The amendment by the House sponsor, Representative Bill Friend, makes it a Class A misdemeanor to photograph at a farm or business without written permission from the owner.

IU law professor Seth Lahn said he believes the bill violates the First Amendment.

“Whether you come at it from a position of food safety or working conditions or animal cruelty – it gets into a number of areas that, I think, the courts have always recognized – and common sense tells you, is an issue the public has an interest in hearing about.”

Illustration © 2011 John Blair

Illustration © 2011 John Blair

Lahn noted that there already are legal ways to get at prohibited conduct: charges of trespassing, fraud, and destruction of property. Friend’s amendment also added a new crime to the bill: lying on a job application with the intent of harming a business. No public comment was allowed on the amendment before the bill passed out of committee 9 to 3 on a party-line vote. Continue reading

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Kentucky Denies Permit for Coal Ash Landfill At Trimble County Power Plant

LG&E's Trimble power plant dominates the region with its giant stacks and resulting pollution. In this picture the existing  coal ash ponds are in the foreground. Now, it is hard to say just where all the ash will go for the power plant. Photo © John Blair

LG&E’s Trimble power plant dominates the region with its giant stacks and resulting pollution. In this picture the existing coal ash ponds are in the foreground. Now, it is hard to say just where all the ash will go for the power plant. Photo © John Blair

March 21, 2013-by Erica Petersen, WFPL News 89.3 FM

The Kentucky Division of Waste Management has denied a pending permit for a coal ash landfill in Trimble County.

The proposed landfill would have been 218 acres, near Louisville Gas and Electric’s Trimble County Power Station. It was meant to store the coal ash produced by the plant, but ever since it was first proposed, the project has encountered numerous problems.

First, residents near the site protested. They worried their family homesteads would be ruined by air and water pollution. Next, a cave was discovered on site. Kentucky has fairly strict cave protection laws, so the Division of Waste Management began evaluating whether LG&E would be required to preserve it. More recently, historian Alicestyne Turley testified that the cave served a historical purpose, as well as an environmental one: she found compelling evidence that the cave had played a role in the Underground Railroad.

Now, the permit has been denied, and LG&E goes back to the drawing board. Continue reading

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The Price of Carbon

March 20, 2013-via Climate Reality and Reggie Watts

Carbon pollution is not only disrupting our lives, it’s hitting our wallets. Comedian and musician Reggie Watts shows how, laying out the billion-dollar connection between fossil-fuel energy and dirty weather events like Superstorm Sandy caused by carbon pollution.

We’ve all been paying the bill for years, but now it’s got to stop and you can help. Share this with your friends and tell our leaders it’s time to put a price on carbon and make the polluters pay.

 

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Studies examine potential links between coal and cancer in Eastern Kentucky

March 19, 2013-by James Bruggers in Watchdog Earth

What do toenails have to with human health and the environment?

Larger than life BW PosterBWLike hair, they can contain contaminants that are bodies are shedding.

I once had my hair sampled for mercury and, to my delight, found that my mercury levels were not alarming.

Well, in reporting yesterday’s news about reported health disparities between Floyd County, where there’s been a lot of surface mining, and two other eastern Kentucky counties, where there hasn’t been any, I was made aware of two other completed studies that might be link mining and public health and a third one underway now.

Speculation seems to be that very tiny particles of coal-dust might be getting into people’s lungs, where they can move in the blood stream. Or people might be picking up contaminants from contaminated drinking water. Or perhaps pollutants are in the soil. Or maybe it could be because of radon.

All three studies are out University of Kentucky. Both completed studies were published in medical journals in 2011.

One had to do with…. yes, toenail clippings.

It sounds a little weird, I know. But stick with me. But all of this can be found in authoritative write-ups on the Internet. Continue reading

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CountryMark Refining and Logistics, LLC to Install $18 Million in Pollution Controls to Resolve Clean Air Act Violations at Indiana Refinery

February 28, 2013-US EPA Press Release

CountryMark's, Mt. Vernon, IN refinery supplies significant quantities of gasoline and diesel fuels to the Tri-State region while using crude oil from essentially regional sources inside the Illinois Basin. Photo © 2013 John Blair

CountryMark’s, Mt. Vernon, IN refinery supplies significant quantities of gasoline and diesel fuels to the Tri-State region while using crude oil from essentially regional sources inside the Illinois Basin. Photo © 2013 John Blair

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Department of Justice announced that Countrymark Refining and Logistics, LLC has agreed to pay a $167,000 civil penalty, perform environmental projects totaling more than $180,000, and spend $18 million on new pollution controls to resolve Clean Air Act (CAA) violations at its refinery, located in Mount Vernon, Ind. 

Once fully implemented, the pollution controls required by the settlement will reduce emissions of harmful air pollution that can cause respiratory problems, such as asthma, and are significant contributors to acid rain, smog, and haze, by an estimated 1,000 tons or more per year.

“Under the settlement, CountryMark will implement new practices and install innovative, cutting-edge pollution controls at its Indiana refinery,” said Cynthia Giles, assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance. “These innovative controls include ensuring that pollution control devices, such as flares, are operated properly to minimize pollution emitted into the air and to improve their overall efficiency.”

“This settlement requires CountryMark to install new controls and implement new practices at its refinery to reduce air pollution from all significant sources at the refinery,” said Ignacia S. Moreno, assistant attorney general for the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division. “Notably, CountryMark will be the third refiner to put in place new measures to substantially reduce gas emissions from its flare, and the company’s commitment to retrofit diesel school buses will also reduce air emissions that affect the area’s residents.” Continue reading

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Agreement allows AEP’s Rockport plant to avoid “scrubbers” until 2028

February 27, 2013- by Sonal Patel in POWERnews. Editor’s Note: Valley Watch was one of the original litigants in the suit filed in 1999. However, it dropped out of the suit in late 2007 since AEP was going to be given until 2018 to put scrubbers on the plant. Valley Watch believed at the time that 2018 was to far in the future for scrubbers to be placed on the plant and dropped out instead of signing the 2007 Consent Decree. Under the new Consent Decree signed this week, AEP will be given an additional ten years, until 2028 to install scrubber technology, making Rockport, IN little more than a SACRIFICE ZONE so that people in southern Michigan and northeast Indiana to avoid paying higher electric rates scrubber installation would entail.

AEP's Rockport plant, a 2,600 MW behemoth located in Rockport, IN will not have to install scrubbers until 2028 under an agreement signed by several environmental groups and the EPA this week. Photo © 2013 John Blair

AEP’s Rockport plant, a 2,600 MW behemoth located in Rockport, IN will not have to install scrubbers until 2028 under an agreement signed by several environmental groups and the EPA this week. Photo © 2013 John Blair

A modified settlement reached between American Electric Power (AEP), a coalition of citizen groups, and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on Monday will allow the utility to install less expensive pollution controls on a coal-fired power plant if it ceases coal combustion by 2015 at three aging power plants in Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky.

The agreement is a modification of a New Source Review (NSR) consent decree reached in 2007 (from a federal court lawsuit filed in 1999) between AEP, the EPA, eight eastern states, and 13 citizen groups. AEP initiated the modification of the consent decree. It will allow the utility company to install dry sorbent injection technology on both units of its 2.6-GW Rockport Generating Station in southern Indiana—not flue gas desulfurization (FGD) technology, a more expensive option, as stipulated in the original 2007 consent decree , the company told POWERnews.

Under terms of the agreement reached on Monday, AEP will retire or refuel with natural gas the 500-MW coal-fired Tanners Creek Generating Station Unit 4 in Indiana, a unit that AEP had planned to retrofit with emissions controls. The agreement will also require that the company retire or refuel the 600-MW Muskingum River Power Plant Unit 5 in Ohio, which AEP said it had planned to do as part of its Mercury and Air Toxics Standards (MATS) compliance plan. And it gives AEP the option of retiring the 800-MW Big Sandy Power Plant Unit 2 in Kentucky. AEP subsidiary Kentucky Power in December alreadyannounced it would retire that unit by 2015 and is now expected to decide on the future of that plant’s 278-MW Unit 1.

Along with allowing the utility to install less-expensive emission control equipment at the Rockport plant, the agreement will require AEP to retire the two Rockport units (built in 1984 and 1989) by 2025 and 2028 or install additional controls to remove at least 98% of its sulfur dioxide emissions. But the agreement would provide flexibility for the company’s Mercury and Air Toxics (MATS) compliance plan for some of its other facilities, AEP spokesperson Melissa McHenry told POWERnews on Monday. Continue reading

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Peabody Energy Gets Subpoena From SEC Relating to Prairie State

February 27, 2013-By Sonja Elmquist, Bloomberg

Prairie State is a Peabody Energy backed power plant that was originally announced in 2001 but took more than twelve years to complete. Municipal utilities in Indiana, Kentucky and Illinois and several other states partnered with Peabody. Valley Watch sought unsuccessfully to inform  numerous municipalities that peabody was "low balling" their figures and that the price would rise well above the price being quoted. Valley Watch's prognostications were correct and now these munis re paying through the nose for electricity they cannot even use. Photo © 2013 John Blair

Prairie State is a Peabody Energy backed power plant that was originally announced in 2001 but took more than twelve years to complete. Municipal utilities in Indiana, Kentucky and Illinois and several other states partnered with Peabody. Valley Watch sought unsuccessfully to inform numerous municipalities that Peabody was “low balling” their figures and that the price would rise well above the price being quoted. Valley Watch’s prognostications were correct and now these munis are paying through the nose for electricity they cannot even use. Photo © 2013 John Blair

Peabody Energy Corp. (BTU), the largest U.S. coal producer, said the Securities and Exchange Commission served it with a subpoena seeking information and documents relating to the development of the Prairie State power station.

Peabody is cooperating with the investigation and believes “pending or threatened proceedings” will be resolved without material impact on the company’s financial condition, it said in its annual report filed with the SEC today.

The Prairie State Energy Campus became operational last year. Peabody, based in St. Louis, owns 5.06 percent of the 1,600-megawatt, coal-fueled power plant in southern Illinois, the balance being owned by public power agencies.

“We look forward to sharing information on what is a highly successful project,” Vic Svec, a spokesman for Peabody, said in an e-mail.

To contact the reporter on this story: Sonja Elmquist in New York at selmquist1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Simon Casey at scasey4@bloomberg.net

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Rice University analysis links ozone levels, cardiac arrest

February 17, 2013- by Mike Williams, News Release from Rice University

 Rice University analysis links ozone levels, cardiac arrest. Studies show particulate matter also has direct impact on heart attacks in Houston. 

Researchers at Rice University in Houston have found a direct correlation between out-of-hospital cardiac arrests and levels of air pollution and ozone. Their work has prompted more CPR training in at-risk communities.

air pollution alertRice statisticians Katherine Ensor and Loren Raun announced their findings today at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) conference in Boston.

Their research, based on a massive data set unique to Houston, was published this month in the American Heart Association journal Circulation.

At the same AAAS symposium, Rice environmental engineer Daniel Cohan discussed how uncertainties in air-quality models might impact efforts to achieve anticipated new ozone standards by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Houston's air is often smoggy, even more so than Evansville's. giving it the dubious distinction of being 8th most polluted according to the American Lung Association for high ozone days.

Houston’s air is often smoggy, even more so than Evansville’s, giving it the dubious distinction of being 8th most polluted city n America, according to the American Lung Association for high ozone days.

Given that the American Lung Association has ranked Houston eighth in the United States for high-ozone days, the Rice researchers set out to see if there is a link between ambient ozone levels and cardiac arrest. Ensor is a professor and chair of Rice’s Department of Statistics, and Raun is a research professor in Rice’s Department of Statistics.

For the new study, the authors analyzed eight years’ worth of data drawn from Houston’s extensive network of air-quality monitors and more than 11,000 concurrent out-of-hospital cardiac arrests (OHCA) logged by Houston Emergency Medical Services (EMS).

They found a positive correlation between OHCAs and exposure to both fine particulate matter (airborne particles smaller than 2.5 micrograms) and ozone.

The researchers found that a daily average increase in particulate matter of 6 micrograms per day over two days raised the risk of OHCA by 4.6 percent, with particular impact on those with pre-existing (and not necessarily cardiac-related) health conditions. Increases in ozone level were similar, but on a shorter timescale: Each increase of 20 parts per billion over one to three hours also increased OHCA risk, with a peak of 4.4 percent. Peak-time risks from both pollutants rose as high as 4.6 percent. Relative risks were higher for men, African-Americans and people over 65. Continue reading

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