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Tuesday, 15 August 2017
Australian coal-power pollution would be illegal in US, Europe and China – report
Environmental Justice Australia report says Australian coal-fired power plants regularly exceed lax limits imposed on them
A representative of Victoria’s Yallourn power plant, pictured, told the
EPA it did not report when pollution levels were exceeded.
Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty Images
Australian coal-fired power stations produce levels of toxic air
pollution that would be illegal in the US, Europe and China, and
regularly exceed even the lax limits imposed on them with few or no
consequences, according to an investigation by Environmental Justice
Australia.
The report reveals evidence that operators of coal power plants in
Australia have been gaming the systems that monitor the deadly
pollution, while others have reported figures the federal government
says are not reliable.
EJA’s investigation reveals further cases of allegedly misleading
behaviour. In Victoria, regulators are investigating one case in which a
representative of a coal power plant allegedly said it regularly
“simplifies” reporting during periods of excessive pollution by just
reporting the figure allowed by its licence, rather than the actual
amount. Pollution
from coal power plants kills hundreds of people each year in Australia.
In Sydney alone, about 130 premature deaths are thought to be caused
each year by coal-fired power stations, with worse impacts in regions
near the stations.
Nationally, the health effects from the pollution emitted by
coal-fired power plants are estimated to cost $2.6bn – a figure that
would amount to $13.20 a megawatt hour if it were added to power costs.
Researchers at EJA collected the individual pollution limits allowed
for 10 of Australia’s 17 commercially operating coal-fired power
stations, chosen for their high levels of pollution and proximity to
populated areas.
Standardising
the limits for comparison and collating them with regulations in the
US, Europe and China, they found that in almost all cases Australian
coal power plants were allowed to emit more toxic pollution.
Mercury emissions compared particularly badly. Coal-fired power is
the second biggest Australian source of mercury, which accumulates in
the environment, causing significant harm to people.
Some coal-fired power plants in New South Wales were allowed to emit
666 times what would be allowed in the US, and 33 times what is allowed
in the EU and China.
Fine particle pollution, which causes hundreds of premature deaths
each year, also compared very badly. Every coal power station in
Victoria is allowed to emit more particulate pollution than power
stations in any of the other three jurisdictions examined, and all in
NSW were allowed to emit more than the Chinese limit.
Australia has no national standard, with each power station having
its own limits. But the EJA researchers found even those limits were
poorly monitored, often exceeded and rarely enforced.
Many power stations were required to monitor their pollution levels
only once or twice a year, the investigation found. Allegations uncovered by EJA,
that one power station was gaming the system by putting less polluting
coal into the generator when the levels were measured, sparked an
inquiry by the NSW Environmental Protection Agency in May.
Levels of particulate pollution reported to the National Pollution
Inventory revealed changes in pollution levels from year to year that
the federal Department of the Environment and Energy said were “not reliable”.
One station, Mount Piper in NSW, recorded a fall in emissions of 90%
between 2014 and 2015, which the department told Guardian Australia was
“unlikely”.
EJA uncovered a previously unpublicised EPA investigation into the
coal-fired power station at Yallourn in Victoria, operated by Energy
Australia. A representative of the power plant told the EPA it did not
report when pollution levels were exceeded, just that the plant emitted
at the limit.
Energy Australia has been contacted for comment.
The investigation also attempted to clarify how many of
Australia’s coal-fired power plants were using the best available
technology to limit toxic emissions. The researchers asked the
operators of all 10 power stations studied what technology they had
in place. Partial information was received for just six of the power
stations.Between the responses and the actual pollution data, the
researchers concluded that none of the 10 stations had the latest
technology. That includes “wet scrubbers” that can remove 99% of
sulfur pollution and “catalytic reduction methods” that can
reduce nitrogen pollution.
“All power stations are emitting significantly more pollution
than they would if they had these technologies installed,” the
report concludes.
It notes that if the pollution limits in the power stations
licences were reduced, they would be forced to use the technology.
“Australia’s air pollution laws are weak, outdated, poorly
monitored and inadequately enforced,” said EJA lawyer Nicola
Rivers, a co-author of the report.
The report also compared the toxic pollution from Australia’s
old coal-fired stations to that of the newest “ultra supercritical
plants,” finding that if current best technology were applied to
the existing stations, new plants would not reduce pollution
significantly.
The report called for urgent action to reduce deaths, including
the introduction of binding national emission standards requiring
international best practice, and emissions reduction programs run by
the states for fine and coarse particle pollution, and sulfur and
nitrogen pollution.
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