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By Joe Kimball | Published Fri, Jan 23 2009 2:35 pm
Just a week after Minnesota's PUC approved a major power transmission line in southwestern Minnesota as part of the Big Stone II coal-burning power plant proposal in South Dakota, the federal EPA has overturned South Dakota's approval of the project, reports the Sierra Club and Clean Water Action, two groups that oppose the project.
The change came just three days into the Obama administration. No news on the project has been posted yet on the EPA Web site.
Sierra Club officials said the EPA's decision comes after the state failed to require state-of-the-art pollution controls for the coal plant that would address concerns about harmful soot, smog and global warming pollution.
"This is a great day not only for clean energy and people's health, it's a victory for the rule of law," said Bruce Nilles, director of the Sierra Club's Move Beyond Coal Campaign. "EPA is signaling that it is back to enforcing long-standing legal requirements fairly and consistently nationwide."
A release from the two groups said:
"As the first major coal plant decision by the EPA since President Obama took office, this decision signals that the dozens of other coal plant proposals currently in permitting processes nationwide will face a new level of federal scrutiny. Sierra Club and Clean Water Action have been working to stop the Big Stone II project and ramp up clean energy investments in for more than three years.
"'Today EPA took the first step toward restoring science and integrity to its work and recognizing the very real need to reduce air pollution from coal-burning power plants,' said Darrell Gerber, Clean Water Action Program Coordinator. 'People living downwind residents and our lakes, rivers and streams will be better protected.'
"This decision likely spells the end of Otter Tail Power's Big Stone II coal plant. While for the past eight years the Bush Administration has refused to regulate global warming pollution, even after being ordered to do so by the US Supreme Court, President Obama has pledged that the US will cut global warming pollution and do its part to avoid the worst consequences of climate change. With coal-fired power plants accounting for almost 30% of our nation's carbon dioxide emissions, burning less coal and investing in clean energy such as wind and solar instead is a common sense approach to helping meet global warming pollution reduction goals.
"The proposed Big Stone II 500-megawatt coal plant would have emitted more than 4 million tons of global pollution annually, the equivalent of adding another half million cars to the road. Today's permit decision extends protections beyond air pollution. The proposed Big Stone II coal plant will draw millions of gallons of water a day from Big Stone Lake-the headwaters of the Minnesota River. The Minnesota River is already heavily polluted with mercury. Coal plants are recognized as the leading source of this pollution."
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