Posted by on 21/04/2009 at 10:04AM
From the Wonk Room.
“Several hundred
people
marched on Duke Energy headquarters this morning” – and forty-four were
arrested
– “to decry the expansion of Duke’s Cliffside coal-fired power
plant in
Rutherford County.”
Oxfam report: “Emergency organizations could be overwhelmed within
seven
years”
as the “victims of climate change-related
disasters”
“increase by “54% to more than 375 million
people
a year on average by 2015.”
Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH): ” What many people” – see Roy
Blunt (R-MO), Sen. John
Barrasso
(R-WY), Rep. Shelley Moore
Capito (R-WV), Rep.
Fred
Upton
(R-OH) – “don’t understand is that climate change legislation can make
our region and our country
stronger.”
Posted by Brad Johnson on 02/12/2008 at 05:37PM
The permits for a 800-megawatt, $2.4 billion Duke Energy Cliffside
coal-fired power plant granted by the North Carolina Department of Air
Quality in
February have
been struck down by a federal court. This case in part stems from a 2005
decision by the Bush administration EPA to
remove these kinds of plants from the hazardous air pollutant provisions
of the Clean Air Act. Shortly after the permits were granted, the
District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals found that the 2005
EPA decision was illegal, and environmental
groups used that ruling to challenge the Cliffside project. Duke’s
argument was that the permit was granted before the circuit court
decision, and should stand.
Lacy Thornburg, for the Western North Carolina District Court, found
that the DAQ permit failed to comply with the
Clean Air Act, notwithstanding EPA’s illegal
maneuvers. Thornburg determined that the permitting process ignored
critical provisions of the Clean Air Act, and that “Duke is simply
refusing to comply with controlling law.”
The Cliffside plant “has the potential to emit in excess of ten tons per
year” of hydrochloric acid and “over 25 tons of a combination of” other
hazardous air pollutants. Section 112 of the Clean Air
Act
governs the federal control program for hazardous air pollutants.
Thornburg’s
judgment found
that the facts of the case were simple:
As of this date, neither the EPA or
DAQ (North Carolina’s authority delegated
with enforcing § 112) has issued to Duke an Air Quality Permit
recognizing compliance with § 112. The material facts herein are not
in dispute. Duke is simply refusing to comply with controlling law.
The Cliffside expansion project was launched in June
2006.