For Immediate Release: January 28, 2013
EPA Contact: Michael Ardito, 415-972-3081, ardito.michael@epa.gov
U.S. EPA Resolves Air Violations with Thermal Energy
Development Partnership in Tracy, California for $145,000
SAN
FRANCISCO – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today announced a
$145,000 settlement with Thermal Energy Development Partnership, a biomass
electric power plant in Tracy, Calif., for Clean Air Act violations for failure
to properly operate and maintain emission monitoring
equipment.
“EPA will
continue to rigorously enforce against facilities located in the San Joaquin
Valley, a geographic focus for our regional Strategic Plan. The message is
simple: facilities must comply with the requirements to monitor their
pollutants,” said Jared Blumenfeld, EPA’s Regional Administrator for the Pacific
Southwest. “With some of the poorest air quality in the nation, the Valley
cannot afford to risk any further deterioration.”
The permits required the facility to properly maintain
and operate a continuous emission monitoring system. Thermal Energy’s monitoring
equipment failed to monitor sulfur dioxide for 30 months, nitrogen oxides and
carbon monoxide for 27 months, and opacity for 9 months. There were no known
emission violations.
The Clean Air
Act violations by Thermal Energy were under the federal New Source Performance
Standard which applies to steam generators constructed after June 19, 1984 and
have a heat input capacity from combusted fuels greater than 100 million BTUs
(British thermal units) per hour. Also considered in the settlement were the
federally enforceable San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District permit
conditions.
Company failure
to operate emissions monitors properly can result in illegal releases of
pollutants into the atmosphere. Facilities are required to properly maintain and
operate emissions monitoring equipment to measure the release of pollutants and
help protect human health. For more information on the Clean Air Act, please
visit the EPA’s web site at:
Particle
pollution can cause serious health problems ranging from aggravated asthma to
premature death in people with heart and lung disease. Exposure to high
concentrations of sulfur dioxide can have serious impacts on breathing,
respiratory illness, alterations in pulmonary defenses, and aggravation of
existing cardiovascular disease.
The San Joaquin Valley, with an economy driven by
agriculture, suffers from high rates of poverty and unemployment. Its unique
topography and wind patterns have also resulted in severe impacts to the public
health. Poor air quality, due in part to high-volume truck traffic, has resulted
in some of the highest rates of childhood asthma in California. We are working
together with our federal, state, and local partners to improve the quality of
life for the 4 million residents in the Valley. The EPA Pacific Southwest
Region’s 2011-2014 Strategic Plan for the San Joaquin Valley may be found at:
www.epa.gov/region9/strategicplan/sanjoaquin.html .
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