EPA Begins to Address Biomass Emissions in Permits Following Court Decision

- by Andrew Childers, March 28, 2014. Source: Envi­ron­ment Reporter

The Envi­ron­men­tal Appeals Board par­tial­ly remand­ed an air pol­lu­tion per­mit for a waste-to-ener­gy facil­i­ty in Puer­to Rico after it failed to account for green­house gas emis­sions from biomass.

The Ener­gy Answers Areci­bo LLC per­mit is one of the first to address emis­sions from bio­mass in the wake of a 2013 fed­er­al appeals court deci­sion vacat­ing an Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Agency rule that exempt­ed bio­genic green­house gas­es from the Clean Air Act’s pre­ven­tion of sig­nif­i­cant dete­ri­o­ra­tion (PSD) and Title V per­mit­ting require­ments, attor­neys and forestry rep­re­sen­ta­tives said.

The EPA has yet to respond to the deci­sion of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Dis­trict of Colum­bia Cir­cuit, and forestry advo­cates said that is increas­ing uncer­tain­ty in an indus­try now sub­ject to the per­mit­ting requirements.

“Our mem­bers con­tin­ue to watch and hope,” David Ten­ny, pres­i­dent of the Nation­al Alliance of For­est Own­ers, told Bloomberg BNA March 26. “Until we get a clear sig­nal from EPA on where things stand, we’re going to con­tin­ue to be in this state of wait­ing, watch­ing and hoping.”

While the EPA has assured the forestry indus­try that it is still study­ing the issue of how best to reg­u­late green­house gas emis­sions from facil­i­ties burn­ing bio­mass, it has not indi­cat­ed when it might pro­pose action.

Until then, Ten­ny said his group is prepar­ing its mem­bers to address green­house gas emis­sions dur­ing the per­mit­ting process.

The EPA did not respond to requests for comment.

Exemp­tion for Bio­mass Facilities

Orig­i­nal­ly, the EPA had exempt­ed facil­i­ties that burn bio­mass from the green­house gas per­mit­ting require­ments until July 21, 2014, as the agency stud­ied how best to reg­u­late those emissions.

How­ev­er, that rule was over­turned by the D.C. Cir­cuit in a July 12, 2013, decision.

The court found that the EPA had not ade­quate­ly jus­ti­fied its deci­sion to exempt emis­sions from bio­mass from the per­mit­ting require­ments. How­ev­er, the court left open the pos­si­bil­i­ty that the EPA could exempt bio­mass from the per­mit­ting pro­gram per­ma­nent­ly if it could iden­ti­fy the Clean Air Act author­i­ty to do so.

The D.C. Cir­cuit has extend­ed the dead­line to request that the law­suit be reheard before the full court until 30 days after the U.S. Supreme Court issues its deci­sion in a law­suit chal­leng­ing the EPA’s green­house gas per­mit­ting requirements.

First Per­mits Address Biomass

On March 25, the EPA’s Envi­ron­men­tal Appeals Board ordered the agency to update the green­house gas emis­sions con­trol require­ments in a PSD per­mit issued to Ener­gy Answers Areci­bo to include bio­genic green­house gas emissions.

The appeals board acknowl­edged that includ­ing green­house gas emis­sions from bio­mass would not alter the con­trols required and said no fur­ther pub­lic com­ment peri­od is necessary.

Ener­gy Answers Areci­bo received its PSD per­mit June 11, 2013, from EPA Region 2 for a waste-to-ener­gy facil­i­ty in Areci­bo, Puer­to Rico. The facil­i­ty is per­mit­ted for two, 1,050 tons per day refuse-derived fuel munic­i­pal waste com­bus­tors, a 77-megawatt steam tur­bine elec­tri­cal gen­er­a­tor, and oth­er equipment.

The per­mit had been chal­lenged by the Coali­tion of Orga­ni­za­tions Against Incinerators.

In addi­tion to the Ener­gy Answers Areci­bo per­mit, EPA Region 9 in Novem­ber 2013 pro­posed mod­i­fi­ca­tions to a PSD per­mit issued to Sier­ra Pacif­ic Indus­tries-Ander­son Divi­sion for a new 31 megawatt cogen­er­a­tion unit capa­ble of burn­ing bio­mass and nat­ur­al gas at its facil­i­ty in Ander­son, Calif. The mod­i­fi­ca­tions, made at the com­pa­ny’s request, would include green­house gas emis­sions lim­its for the bio­mass combustion.

“It’s just an exam­ple of how con­fus­ing it can be when you don’t have a clear pol­i­cy,” Ten­ny said.

EPA May Wait on Supreme Court

Although the EPA has assured the forestry indus­try that it is work­ing to address the issue of bio­genic green­house gas­es in per­mit­ting, the agency may wait until after the Supreme Court reviews the larg­er green­house gas per­mit­ting pro­gram, Ann Weeks, an attor­ney for the Clean Air Task Force, told Bloomberg BNA. Weeks had argued on behalf of the envi­ron­men­tal groups chal­leng­ing the bio­mass per­mit­ting exemp­tion before the D.C. Circuit.

The Supreme Court, which grant­ed cer­tio­rari Oct. 15, 2013, in six cas­es chal­leng­ing the EPA’s var­i­ous green­house gas reg­u­la­tions, heard oral argu­ments Feb. 24 over whether the EPA’s deci­sion to reg­u­late green­house gas emis­sions from vehi­cles nec­es­sar­i­ly trig­gered per­mit­ting require­ments for sta­tion­ary sources.

How the Supreme Court decides that case could affect any EPA pro­pos­al to address green­house gas emis­sions from biomass.

“We are not hear­ing that they are work­ing on any­thing per­tain­ing to the applic­a­bil­i­ty of GHG per­mit­ting to major sources of biomass/biogenic CO2– and that makes sense, since the ques­tion about CO2 only trig­ger­ing is solid­ly in front of the Supreme Court right now,” Weeks said in an e‑mail.

Dur­ing the oral argu­ments, the jus­tices seemed to give seri­ous con­sid­er­a­tion to a com­pro­mise posi­tion that would see only air pol­lu­tants sub­ject to nation­al ambi­ent air qual­i­ty stan­dards trig­ger the pre­ven­tion of sig­nif­i­cant dete­ri­o­ra­tion per­mit­ting requirements.

In that instance, many sources burn­ing bio­mass would like­ly escape the per­mit­ting require­ments, Weeks said.

How­ev­er, Ten­ny said the EPA has assured the Nation­al Asso­ci­a­tion of For­est Own­ers that it is work­ing to address bio­genic emis­sions regard­less of the Supreme Court’s decision.

“The con­sis­tent mes­sage we’ve got­ten is the Supreme Court deci­sion is not deter­min­ing the tim­ing of their pol­i­cy, but at the same time, the Supreme Court deci­sion is what it is,” he said.

To con­tact the reporter on this sto­ry: Andrew Childers in Wash­ing­ton atachilders@bna.com

To con­tact the edi­tor respon­si­ble for this sto­ry: Lar­ry Pearl in Wash­ing­ton at lpearl@bna.com


Posted

in

by


EJ Communities Map

Map of Coal and Gas Facilities

We are mapping all of the existing, proposed, closed and defeated dirty energy and waste facilities in the US. We are building a network of community groups to fight the facilities and the corporations behind them.

Our Network

Watch Us on YouTube