Power Plant Mercury Emissions Poisoning the Great Lakes
This week we released a report, Poisoning the Great Lakes: Mercury Emissions from Coal Fired Power Plants in the Great Lakes Region, which highlights the impacts of mercury emissions from Great Lakes power plants on the people, fish, birds, and wildlife of our region. EPA recently issued new nationwide Mercury and Air Toxics Standards that require power plants to cut their mercury emissions by 90% on average, as well as to make similar cuts to their emissions of arsenic, lead, acid gases, and other toxic air pollution.
Our report focuses on the 144 coal-fired power plants in the Great Lakes region, and names the 25 worst emitters, which were responsible for putting over 7,000 pounds of mercury into the air in 2010. Mercury emissions from power plants in the Great Lakes region account for close to 25% of the nations mercury emissions total. Mercury is so highly toxic that exposure to even very small amounts in fish has serious implications for public health, and especially our childrens health. And mercury fish consumption advisories depress the Great Lakes multi-billion dollar fishing economy.
Mercury is a dangerous brain poison that doesnt belong in our Great Lakes. It puts the health of kids and pregnant women at risk and adds an unwelcome danger to eating what our fishermen catch. Thats why it is so important that we support the EPAs standards to reduce mercury pollution by holding polluters accountable. Even more critical is that every single US Senator from the region stand up for the Lakes by rejecting reckless attempts to derail the long overdue Clean Air Act updates that can help tame this problem.
EPAs authority to adopt these critical safeguards goes back to 1990, when the first President Bush signed amendments to the Clean Air Act that were passed by overwhelming bipartisan majorities in Congress and directed EPA to set standards on major sources such as power plants. But now, twenty-two years later, Congress is seeking to roll back these and other basic provisions of the Clean Air and Clean Water Act that have protected our health and environment for decades.
http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2012/06/08/496598/power-plant-mercury-emissions-poisoning-the-great-lakes/