Here's a whole mess of headlines I missed while away, starting with the earliest. Wouldn't be surprised if several of these where picked up elsewhere.
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EPA to issue rule to smooth switch to ultra-low-sulfur diesel fuel
June 1 -- Federal environmental regulators plan to issue a rule later this year to help ease the transition to ultra-low-sulfur diesel fuel.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said it will shift the retail compliance date from Sept. 1 to Oct. 15, 2006, to allow more time for terminals and retail outlets to comply with the ultra-low-sulfur diesel standard of 15 parts per million. During the extended transition period, diesel fuel measuring 22 parts per million can be marketed as ultra-low-sulfur diesel, according to the EPA.
The rule also will establish a test program in cooperation with the fuel industry to determine if the current testing tolerance of 2 parts per million is sufficient.
The proposed changes will not interfere with the planned introduction of clean diesel vehicles and engines in the autumn of 2006, according to the EPA.
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Mohawk Paper increase use of wind power to make paper
June 2 -- Mohawk Paper Mills is increasing its use of wind power to manufacturer paper.
The company on June 1 started using 45 million kilowatt hour of annual wind power to run two mills in New York and a newly purchased site in Hamilton, Ohio, the Cohoes, N.Y.-based company said.
Mohawk said it is only second to Johnson & Johnson as a consumer of wind power for manufacturing operations. And the company´s three locations are the only paper mills in the country using wind power to make paper, Mohawk said.
Wind power accounts for 21 percent of the company´s energy needs at its two mills in upstate New York and 50 percent of the energy needs at the Ohio mill, Mohawk said.
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Shoe maker installs solar energy system at Calif. warehouse
June 8 -- Footwear maker Timberland Co. is installing a 400-kilowatt solar power system that will meet nearly 60 percent of the electricity needs at its Ontario, Calif., distribution center.
The 401.8-kilowatt project will include 1,960 photovoltaic modules. Northern Power Systems, a Distributed Energy Systems Corp. subsidiary, will design and construct the system. Stratham, N.H.-based Timberland will receive a $1.5 million rebate through California´s Self-Generation Incentive Program.
Timberland also will retain the green credits from the solar power system, which represent the emissions associated with power that would have come from the grid. The system annually will avert 935,000 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions, according to the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
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LFG-to-energy project at Wis. landfill will generate 3.2 megawatts
June 8 -- A new landfill gas-to-energy project in Farmington, Wis., will create enough energy to power 2,700 homes, Waste Management Inc. said.
Waste Management will begin construction of the power project at its Deer Track Park landfill this month, and the plant is expected to be operating by the end of this year, said Brian Linzmeier, landfill site manager.
The plant will generate 3.2 megawatts of electricity initially, but that could double over time, Linzmeier said.
"Soon, area residents will have last night´s leftovers to thank when they turn on a light switch or open a garage door," he said.
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3 oil firms to pay $1.3M to settle violations on Wyo. Indian reservation
June 8 -- Three oil companies will pay a combined $1.3 million to settle alleged environmental violations on tribal lands in Fremont County, Wyo.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency alleges that BP America Production Co., CamWest Inc. and CamWest LP violated the Clean Water Act, the Safe Drinking Water Act and the Oil Pollution Act. The oil fields where the alleged violations took place are located on the Wind River Indian Reservation of the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho Indian Tribes. The alleged violations include underground injection, oil containment and surface water discharge issues.
The parties lodged a consent decree June 6 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Wyoming. The $1.3 million settlement includes supplemental environmental projects totaling $724,956.
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Minnesota agency cracks down on petroleum storage tanks
June 10 -- B&H Petroleum will pay a $30,000 civil penalty to settle hazardous waste violations alleged by the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.
The company operates a petroleum storage tank installation, upgrading and demolition facility in Mankato, Minn. The agency alleged B&H Petroleum failed to evaluate wastes, improperly managed hazardous wastes and failed to get required permits. The allegations stemmed from a November 2001 inspection of the facility.
B&H Petroleum also agreed to stop dismantling waste storage tanks.
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Ohio air agency approves grants for clean-coal projects
June 16 -- The Ohio Air Quality Development Authority has approved eight grants totaling $5.3 million for clean-coal technology projects throughout the state, the group said June 16.
The grants range in length from 13 to 48 months, and the authority said it hopes the projects stimulate economic development while protecting the environment, said Mark Shanahan, executive director of the authority.
The Ohio Air Quality Development Authority is a nonregulatory government agency that helps Ohio businesses comply with air pollution regulations. The entities receiving the grants are Energy Industries of Ohio; FirstEnergy Corp.; Babcock & Wilcox Co.; Battelle; the Ohio Energy Project; and Ohio State University, which received three grants.
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2 petro refiners agree to to pay $1 billion to reduce plants´ emissions
June 17 -- Two petroleum refiners will pay about $1 billion to reduce annual emissions from their plants by more than 44,000 tons, under an agreement with the federal government.
Valero Energy Corp. will spend more than $700 million to install pollution control equipment at its refineries, according to the consent decree filed June 16 in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas. The measure will reduce annual emissions of nitrogen oxides by 4,400 tons and sulfur dioxide by 16,000 tons.
Sunoco Inc. will shell out $285 million to reduce emissions at its refineries, according to a June 16 consent decree filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. The agreement will reduce annual emissions of nitrogen oxides by 4,400 tons and sulfur dioxide by more than 19,500 tons at Sunoco refineries.
The settlements are part of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency´s Petroleum Refinery Initiative, which addresses refinery pollution issues through a comprehensive cooperative approach. Fifteen oil refiners operating 76 refineries have reached agreements with the government under the program. Those settlements represent 65 percent of the domestic petroleum refining capacity.
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EPC commissions anaerobic digester to produce electricity in Wis.
June 17 -- Environmental Power Corp. is commissioning the first of its electricity generating anaerobic digester systems in collaboration with Dairyland Power Cooperative.
The system, at Five Star Dairy in Elk Mound, Wis., will use waste from 800 cows to produce enough electricity for about 600 homes.
"The commissioning of this system is the first step toward what we believe will be an important role for this superior technology in helping our country cost-effectively meet its growing energy demands while protecting the environment," said Joseph Cresci, chairman of Portsmouth, N.H.-based Environmental Power.
Dairyland Power, of La Crosse, Wis., distributes power wholesale to 25 member cooperatives and 20 municipal utilities in Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa and Illinois.
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Senate proposal to cut diesel emissions receives bipartisan backing
By Bruce Geiselman
June 17 -- Ohio´s senior senator has introduced legislation aimed at reducing diesel engine emissions, and it is receiving bipartisan support and endorsements from engine and equipment manufacturers and environmentalists.
Republican Sen. George Voinovich, a member of the environment committee, introduced the legislation June 16 and appeared on Capitol Hill with Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., a fellow committee member and supporter of the legislation.
Representatives of several engine manufacturers and environmental groups also appeared to lend their endorsements.
The bill would distribute more than $1 billion over five years to establish grant and loan programs to help states develop programs for retrofitting existing diesel engines with new emission control technology and to fund development of new technologies.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has adopted new regulations establishing tighter emission limits for new diesel engines -- but the new regulations won´t address the problems presented by an estimated 11 million existing diesel engines used on buses, garbage trucks, construction equipment, tractors, and a variety of other types of equipment.
"The Diesel Emissions Reduction Act of 2005 will provide pivotal funding through national and state-level grant and loan programs for the voluntary retrofitting of existing diesel engines," Voinovich said. "I am pleased that such a strong, diverse coalition of environmental, industry, and public officials understands the need for this legislation and is working hard to make it a reality."
Diesel vehicles account for about half of the nitrogen oxide and particulate matter emissions from mobile sources. The EPA´s new diesel fuel and engine regulations will reduce diesel emissions in new engines by more than 80 percent. However, the full benefits of the rules won´t be realized until 2030 because existing engines can last for hundreds of thousands of miles and for as long as 30 years, Voinovich and Carper said.
"EPA´s new diesel regulations will go a long way to cleaning the air, but it could take up to 25 years before today´s current dirtier engines are replaced," Carper said. "This bill will help us meet our clean-air goals quicker, meaning less children being hospitalized for asthma and more lives saved."
Jim Parker, vice president of construction equipment maker Caterpillar Inc., called the proposal a "landmark bill, which provides a basis for a consistent national approach for reducing diesel fleet emissions."
The proposal also won the endorsement of Environmental Defense, an advocacy group and frequent critic of Republican environmental policies. "The Diesel Emissions Reduction Act of 2005 is a good example of common-sense legislation that is winning support from industry and nongovernmental organizations who are working together on retrofit activities as a workable solution for reducing emissions in older diesel engines," group President Fed Krupp said.
Other co-sponsors of the bill are Sens. James Inhofe, R-Okla., chairman of the Senate Environment Committee; Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y.; Dianne Feinstein, D.-Calif..; Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas; and Johnny Isakson, R-Ga.
Contact Waste News government affairs editor Bruce Geiselman at (330) 865-6172 or
bgeiselman@crain.com
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U.S. Chamber of Commerce urges Senate to reject energy bill changes
June 22 -- The U.S. Chamber of Commerce sent a letter to members of the Senate on June 21 urging them to reject amendments to the energy bill that would establish mandatory cap-and-trade programs for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., plan to ask the Senate to include a measure that would require reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., also has proposed a less stringent plan. The proponents argue that the measures are necessary to address global warming.
However, the Chamber of Commerce objects to both plans. The U.S. Energy Information Agency has estimated that the McCain-Lieberman and Bingaman amendments would lower gross domestic product by $852 billion and $569 billion respectively, the Chamber wrote to senators.
"Such amendments will limit the sources of energy the nation can use, impose millions of dollars in new costs on businesses, and cripple the economy," wrote Bruce Josten, Chamber executive vice president.
The Chamber said it would support an alternative amendment expected by Sens. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., and Mark Pryor, D-Ark., which would provide an incentive plan for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
A copy of the Chamber´s letter is available online at
www.uschamber.com/issues/letters/2005/0 ... icyact.htm
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Pa. cites gasoline providers for not selling reduced emissions gas
June 23 -- Pennsylvania has come down on several gasoline providers that have failed to meet the June 1 deadline to sell gasoline blended to reduce summertime emissions.
State regulations require retailers to begin sell the less volatile Low Reid Vapor Pressure fuel, which fuel releases fewer volatile organic compounds when combusted, by June 1 to help decrease ground-level ozone. Distributors must ship the blended gasoline to retailers from May 1 through Sept. 15. Inspectors from the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection found distributors providing noncompliant gasoline to retailers after May 1.
The DEP sent notices of violation to Sheetz Inc., Penn Tank Lines Inc., Bruceton Mills Farm Service Inc., Coen Oil Co. Gnagey Oil and Gas, Bradigan’s Inc., CLO Transport LLP, Petroleum Products Corp., Petroleum Traders Corp., Neville Gulf LP and BP Products NA Inc.
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President Bush stumps in Md. for construction of nuclear power plants
June 24 -- Donning a hard hat, President Bush visited the Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant in Lusby, Md., on June 22 to publicly call on Congress to pass an energy bill and to publicly support nuclear energy and call for the construction of new nuclear power plants.
While acknowledging that nuclear energy is controversial, Bush said further development of reactors is necessary to obtain greater independence from foreign energy sources and to improve the environment.
Bush said scientific and technological advances over the past 30 years have made nuclear power plants safer than in the 1970s, when an accident at the Three Mile Island reactor near Middletown, Pa., created widespread fear about the possibility of a release of radioactive material. No injuries resulted, and the federal government subsequently tightened its regulatory oversight.
However, some environmentalists are rejecting the idea of developing new nuclear power plants, despite their concerns about greenhouse gas emissions and global climate change.
"The Bush administration and its allies in Congress have painted a glowing picture of nuclear power to justify billions of dollars in new taxpayer subsidies for the industry," said Carl Pope, executive director of the Sierra Club. "In reality, nuclear power poses a major security risk and produces a radioactive waste, which we have no way to store safely over the long term.
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Wis. Supreme Court rules that utility can proceed with expansion
June 29 -- Wisconsin Energy Corp. won a legal battle June 28 when the state Supreme Court overturned a lower court´s decision that hindered a $2 billion project to double power production at one of the company´s coal-fired power plants.
In a 4-2 vote, the court ruled that state regulators properly approved the project, which will provide enough electricity to power some 615,000 homes. The decision reversed a ruling by the Dane County Circuit Court that blocked construction at the Oak Creek, Wis., Power Plant.
We Energies, a Wisconsin Energy Corp. subsidiary, wants to build two 615-megawatt units at the plant. The Oak Creek site currently produces 1,200 megawatts of electricity through four existing units. The company has retired four older coal-fired generators at the plant.
The expansion is part of We Energies´ larger plan to provide electricity to Wisconsin, which is in desperate need of new capacity, according to the company.
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CO2 report gives mixed message for U.S.
July 5 -- U.S. carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels increased by 1.7 percent in 2004, according to the U.S. Department of Energy’s Energy Information Administration.
But while total carbon dioxide emissions increased, the amount of carbon dioxide emitted per dollar of real gross domestic product, referred to as emissions intensity, declined by 2.6 percent in 2004 as the economy grew by 4.4 percent.
"This reduction demonstrates that we are on course to meet, and may exceed, the ambitious goal President Bush set forth in 2002 to reduce greenhouse gas intensity by 18 percent by 2012," Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman said.
Total U.S. energy-related carbon dioxide emissions have grown by 18.2 percent during the 1990 to 2004 period, according to the EIA’s preliminary findings. A final report, once more data is available, will be issued in November. Energy-related carbon dioxide emissions account for more than 80 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions and are a good indicator of total U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, according to the EIA.
A warmer than normal winter and cooler than normal summer in 2004 helped to hold down carbon dioxide emissions last year, according to the energy report. However, the impact of a strong economy and growth in industrial output helped offset those benefits.
The EIA’s estimates are available at
www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/1605/flash/flash.html
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Western Wind Energy buys 700-megawatt wind farm in California
July 6 -- Western Wind Energy Corp. has purchased a 700-megawatt wind farm in California, which includes a power purchase agreement with Southern California Edison Co.
The wind farm, which is in Tehachapi, Calif., about 72 miles from Los Angeles, includes about 500 wind turbine generators that can produce 1.4 trillion watt-hours of electricity per year. The cost of the acquisition is about $829,000.
Coquitlam, B.C.-based Western Wind Energy has subsidiaries in Arizona, California and New Brunswick.
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Coalition forms to advance the cause of wind-generated energy
July 8 -- A new coalition of wind energy advocates has formed to push the merits of wind-generated electricity.
The organizations involved in the coalition, called Wind Energy Works, include a diverse group of national, regional and local environmental, agricultural, economic development, faith-based and renewable energy advocates.
The group´s mission is to educate the public about the benefits of wind-generated electricity to counter the misinformation that wind-energy opponents are spreading, said Randall Swisher, executive director of the American Wind Energy Association, which led the coalition´s formation.
More information on the coalition and its members can be found at
www.awea.org
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