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Mary Anne Hitt

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New Carbon Pollution Safeguards Will Protect Our Health, Our Children's Future

Posted: 03/28/2012 10:21 am

Today, our nation is taking a historic step for our health and our children's future. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Obama administration have just announced new carbon pollution safeguards that will protect clean air and the planet, while also spurring innovation and creating jobs in the clean energy economy.

Carbon pollution is linked to life-threatening air pollution like the smog that triggers asthma attacks, and it is the main contributor to climate disruption -- making it a serious hazard to Americans' health and future.

EPA today established new proposed safeguards under the Clean Air Act to protect Americans from dangerous carbon pollution produced by new coal plants.

These standards will protect Americans' health, our economy and the future of our children, from carbon's threats. Before today, there were no limits on the amount of carbon being spewed into the air by the nation's largest sources of carbon pollution: dirty coal-fired power plants.

Concerned about these dangers, Americans have repeatedly said no to new coal-fired power plants for the past decade, defeating 166 proposed coal plants across the nation. Now, as the Sierra Club's executive director, Michael Brune, said today in a press statement, "These first-ever carbon pollution standards for new power plants mean that business as usual for the nation's biggest sources of carbon pollution, dirty coal-burning utilities, is over."

As I've said before, a growing body of scientific evidence shows that warming temperatures caused by industrial carbon pollution pose a number of threats to our health and families, including worsening smog pollution, which in turn triggers asthma attacks and other respiratory illnesses.

Doctors, nurses, scientists and other experts say that this increased smog pollution is especially dangerous for children because it permanently damages and reduces the function of children's lungs -- a major concern for all my fellow parents out there.

These new air quality protections are a historic step forward in allowing EPA to focus on the industries that create the lion's share of the nation's carbon pollution, because it is time to hold big polluters accountable for the pollutants they spew into our air.

Over 120 health organizations including the American Academy of Pediatrics, American Lung Association, American Medical Association, American Nurses Association, American Public Health Association, American Thoracic Society and others are on record stating:

Climate change is a serious public health issue. As temperatures rise, more Americans will be exposed to conditions that can result in illness and death due to respiratory illness, heat-and weather-related stress and disease carried by insects. These health issues are likely to have the greatest impact on our most vulnerable communities, including children, older adults, those with serious health conditions and the most economically disadvantaged.

Clean Air Act protections like these also spur innovation and modernization in our energy sector, creating much-needed jobs, protecting public health and tackling climate disruption. Countries around the world are racing to see who will lead the clean energy future, and we cannot afford to let American fall behind. These new protections will help ensure our nation is leading the way in developing the cutting-edge clean energy technologies of the 21st century.

Every family has the right to breathe clean air, free from the toxic pollution that has taken too many lives and destroyed too many communities. We cannot accept more dirty coal while our friends and family miss days of school and work, ending up in the emergency room instead. Or while American workers remain off the job, when clean energy projects could create thousands of sustainable careers. Or while the fate of our planet hangs in the balance, as global temperatures rise.

By establishing carbon pollution protections, the EPA is moving forward to clean up and modernize the way we power our country -- a move that will make for healthier kids, families and workers, while creating much-needed jobs and fighting climate disruption.

 

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Today, our nation is taking a historic step for our health and our children's future. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Obama administration have just announced new carbon pollution sa...
Today, our nation is taking a historic step for our health and our children's future. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Obama administration have just announced new carbon pollution sa...
 
 
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11:34 AM on 04/01/2012
Mary Anne, why place so many people out of work when we can capture all of the CO2 and eliminate completely! We can also eliminate the coal ash too. No worry about asthma, and I am a serious asthma patient who has serious concerns about clean air! MP BioMass has an internationally patented system that has been in place since 2003 and captures the CO2 directly from the coal stacks! It has an ROI of 5 years or less. It produces three renewable energy sources that provides methanol, oxygen, and more electricity to the grid, providing a tremendous revenue stream to municipalities, state, and federal government through the tax streams it creates. Example: a simple 20 MWe system that can be used on a 200 MWe coal plant, will produce over 75 million gallons of methanol a year. With a whole sale price of $1.34 per gallon, that is over $100 million a year in revenues for a utility company. Check us out at: www.mpbiomass.com
09:20 PM on 03/30/2012
"Carbon pollution is linked to life-threatening air pollution like the smog that triggers asthma attacks"

How exactly is it "linked"?

More junk science. CO2 is not pollution.
05:29 PM on 03/28/2012
I believe the EPA will start fining and penalizing those cities and states still allowing carbon plant pollution, which is mostly in urban places east of the Mississippi River and rural areas west of that waterway. People do care abouth their heath and well-being and do not want i these manipulated by inappropriate public leadership.
05:02 PM on 03/28/2012
Certain cities, states suffer BIG from severe, deadly carbon plant pollution operating inside jurisdictions.

Publication and study-identified CITIES include Philadelphia, Memphis, New Orleans, Atlanta, Detroit, and New Jersey’s Newark and Camden. Identified STATES include Kentucky, Mississippi, Nevada, Indiana, Georgia, Texas, New Jersey, Pennsylvania.

Most likely the EPA will start cracking down on these mentioned mostly Liberal Democrat cities and Conservative Republican states, regardless of White House or partisan influence after this November.

The standards will be direly needed to fight longtime environmental crimes allowed by rogue Mayors and Governors, while protecting human life, taxpayers and voters.
04:58 PM on 03/28/2012
Although this is progress, note that the Sierra Club remains remarkably silent about the dangerous particulate pollution from residential wood burning. In the nine county San Francisco Bay Area, residential wood smoke pollution accounts for 33 to 80% of the regional PM 2.5 levels from November to the end of March. This same circumstance is true nationwide as residential wood burning both for ambience and home heating has increased 34%in the last decade and is a significant factor in global warming. See http://www.familiesforcleanair.org
10:29 PM on 03/28/2012
correct. its the particles - NOT CO2 that is the problem.......