It only takes a little bit of mercury to cause a lot of death and brain damage.
But every year, coal-fired power plants alone pump 50 tons of this
potent neurotoxin into our air. Mercury exposure is so widespread in
this country that as many as 1 in 6 women of childbearing age has
mercury levels in her blood high enough to put a baby at risk of mercury
poisoning,1
Mercury has been totally unregulated by the EPA, until now. The EPA just
announced a significant rule to reduce emissions of mercury, arsenic,
lead, dioxins, acid gasses, and six dozen other toxic chemicals that
power plants are now able to freely dump into our air.
It's the most important clean air rule since the Clean Air Act was
updated in 1990 -- and the EPA is predictably under tremendous pressure
by the coal industry and other polluters to weaken it.
Tell the EPA you support this landmark rule to stop the free emission of
mercury, arsenic, lead and other toxics into our air. Submit a public
comment now.
For decades, the electric industry has successfully fought requirements to reduce these toxics.
They've kept releasing mercury into our air, where it finds its way into
the vast majority of our lakes and waterways, into our fish, and then
into our bodies, where the poison accumulates, causing deadly disease
and impairing fundamental brain functions like the ability to walk,
talk, read, write and learn.
Now we have a chance to change that. According to the EPA, reduced
emissions from this new air toxics rule will save as many as 17,000
American lives every year by 2015, and will prevent up to 120,000 cases
of childhood asthma.
These health benefits will also provide tremendous monetary benefits of
between $60 billion to $140 billion annually, at a substantially lower
cost of less than $11 billion for the polluters.
With no sense of irony, they claim this is too expensive a cost for them
to bear -- as they reap billions of dollars in profit and heap
substantially higher health costs onto the public. But the cost of the
new regulations is a bargain, and the requirements are very reasonable:
power plants have 4 years to install or upgrade to technology that
already exists and is in use at many power plants nationwide.
As we have seen with the repeated attacks on the Clean Air Act's ability
to regulate climate pollution, industry efforts to weaken this air
toxics rule will be fierce, and these powerful utilities have many
friends in the congress who are more than happy to do this dirty work.
We need to display a massive show of support to encourage the EPA to
keep this landmark rule as strong as possible. CREDO is standing with
numerous other environmental organizations to deliver many hundreds of
thousands of comments to the EPA. Please add your voice now.
Tell the EPA: Don't bow to industry pressure. Keep the air toxics rule
strong to protect Americans from dangerous air pollution. Submit your public comment now.