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ACID RAIN-FIGHTING ENVIRONMENTAL ORGANIZATION URGES
SUPPORT FOR PROPOSED INTERSTATE AIR QUALITY RULE
If Approved, the Regs Would Stop Acid Rain Damage
in Adirondacks & Improve Human Health Nationwide

For more information:
John F. Sheehan
518-432-1770 (ofc)
518-441-1340 (cell)
518-489-4186 (home)

Released, Wednesday, February 25, 2004

RALEIGH-DURHAM, N.C. - The Adirondack Council today praised the US Environmental Protection Agency's proposed Interstate Air Quality Rule, telling federal officials hosting a hearing on the rule that the cuts it requires would stop acid rain damage in the Adirondack Park and help North Carolina residents breathe more easily.

At six million acres (more than 9,000 square miles), New York's Adirondack Park is the largest American park outside of Alaska. It was the first place in America to show signs of acid rain damage, beginning in the 1970s. The Adirondack Council, the park's largest environmental organization, has been fighting for a solution ever since.

If approved, the new rule for electric power plants in 29 eastern states would reduce sulfur dioxide emissions by 50% from 2002 levels by 2010; and by 71% by 2015. Nitrogen emissions from power plants in the region will also be reduced in two phases, to levels 65% below current emissions by 2015.

Adirondack Council Legislative Director Scott Lorey told the US Environmental Protection Agency hearing panel today that the organization was pleased with the deep cuts proposed in the new rule. He urged North Carolinians and others in attendance to support the proposed rule. The hearing was held at the Holiday Inn at Raleigh-Durham Airport. The hearing will continue on Thursday, February 26.

"We are here in Raleigh today because we have so much in common with this region," Lorey said. "Much of the acid rain and mercury pollution in upstate New York and here in the Appalachian region come from the same power plants. The streams in both regions become acidic and we watch as they slowly lose their trout. The views from Adirondack mountaintops, like those from the Great Smoky Mountains, are sometimes so obscured by haze that the trip to the summit seems pointless. Our children increasingly suffer from asthma and suffer the consequences of high ozone levels in the summer months.

"Ironically, the top of one of the highest Adirondack peaks is among the worst places to breathe the air," Lorey explained. "Our problem is your problem."

"The Adirondack Council welcomes and strongly supports the proposed Interstate Air Quality Rule. The rule is intended to address the inability of downwind states, such as New York, to come into compliance with national ambient air quality standards, when power plant emissions from outside their borders are a substantial contributor to their pollution problems," Lorey said.

"The Interstate Air Quality Rule will result in substantial public health benefits, far in excess of its cost. Tens of thousands of premature deaths of our citizens with respiratory illnesses may be avoided each year. We applaud these steps on behalf of all New Yorkers. But we take a special interest in the secondary benefits of the reduction in acid deposition throughout the eastern portion of the nation and in the most sensitive area, the Adirondack Park," Lorey noted.

He testified that there is still room for improvement of the proposed rule, either by shortening the timelines, or by deepening the proposed emissions cuts. He said the Council would ask EPA to do both.

The new cap and trade program envisioned in the proposed rule and the target reductions in emissions meet or exceed the recommendations in the Report to Congress by the National Acid Deposition Assessment Program in 1998, and is consistent with the recommendations of several other similar reports.

In January, the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences recommended that EPA address the regional transport of pollutants with a multi-pollutant approach for similar sources. The NRC recommended a cap and trade strategy where feasible.

In December of 2002, Environmental Defense issued a publication calling on the EPA to adopt a new cap and trade program year round for nitrogen with additional cuts in sulfur that would focus on the eastern region. The EPA's proposed rule parallels that report.

The rule echoes the recommendations of the Southern Appalachian Mountains Initiative (SAMI), a collaborative effort to improve air quality which involved a number of state agencies, environmental organizations, and the scientific community. The SAMI report was issued in August of 2002. The proposed rule also meets the goals of the acid rain platform adopted by the Association of New England Governors' and Eastern Canadian Premiers at their annual conference in 1999.

"Congress has been deadlocked on clean air issues for so long, it is a welcome change to see the decisive action to bring our acid rain problems to an end," Lorey later explained. "The sooner we start making these cuts, the sooner our lakes and forests will recover from decades of damage."

As a result of decades of acid rain, more than 500 of the Adirondack Park's 2,800 lakes and ponds are too acidic to support their native life. Thousands of acres of high-elevation red spruce and fir forests have been wiped out and acid-rain-caused mercury contamination has been documented in more than 20 Adirondack lakes, making the fish unfit to eat.

Founded in 1975, the Adirondack Council is a privately funded not-for-profit organization dedicated to ensuring the ecological integrity and wild character of the Adirondack Park. The Council accomplishes its goals through research, education, advocacy and legal action. The Council does not accept government support of any kind.


The Adirondack Council
P.O. Box D-2, 103 Hand Ave. - Suite 3
, Elizabethtown, NY 12932 - 877-873-2240
342 Hamilton Street, Albany, NY 12210 - 800-842-PARK
info@adirondackcouncil.org