EPA Warned to Keep Commitment to Regulate Ship Air Pollution

EPA Warned to Keep Commitment to Regulate Ship Air Pollution

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

For more information contact:
Teri Shore, Friends of the Earth: 415.544.0790, ext. 19
Sarah Burt, Earthjustice: 510.550.6700

EARTHJUSTICE AND FRIENDS OF THE EARTH SUBMIT 60-DAY NOTICE OF INTENT TO FILE CITIZEN SUIT UNDER CLEAN AIR ACT

(Washington, DC) Last week, Earthjustice and Friends of the Earth warned the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that the organizations could sue the agency for failing to meet an April 27 deadline to regulate air pollution from large ships. EPA recently postponed its commitment to set standards for ship engines by 18 months, until December 2009. Read the 60-day notice here: http://www.earthjustice.org/library/legal_docs/ship-diesel-60-day-notice.pdf.

Ocean-going vessels are one of the largest mobile sources of air pollution in the world, generating 18 to 30 percent of global nitrogen oxide emissions that contribute to smog and 16 percent of sulfur oxide emissions from petroleum sources.

“The diesel death zones around port and coastal communities continue to expand with no relief,” said Teri Shore of Friends of the Earth in San Francisco. “With this last delay, Bush’s EPA has shredded any hope that ship smokestacks bringing cargo to our nation?s ports will be forced to clean up any time soon.”

“The EPA would like to ignore its own commitments to finally address the ship pollution problem,” said Sarah Burt of Earthjustice. “EPA’s cavalier approach to the Clean Air Act is forcing polluted communities to take this issue to the courts.”

Smokestack emissions from the global shipping fleet are projected to double in North America in the next decade, exposing people to diesel exhaust that contributes to respiratory illness, cancer, heart disease and premature death. The ships burn dirty, asphalt-like bunker fuel that is thousands of times dirtier than diesel used by trucks or trains and most operate on engines that pre-date even weak international standards. Just one ship pulling into port can pollute as much a 350,000 cars in one hour and major ports receive hundreds of ship calls a month. The air pollution from large ships is one of the least addressed environmental justice issues facing port communities nationwide including Oakland, Los Angeles, Long Beach, Houston, and New Orleans.

EPA committed to the 2007 deadline to regulate ocean-going vessel emissions in a 2003 Final Rule approved by the Washington D. C. Circuit Court of Appeals in response to a previous lawsuit by Bluewater Network (which has since merged with Friends of the Earth) and Earthjustice challenging lack of agency action on smokestack pollution. The Clean Air Act requires EPA to establish regulations to reduce air pollution from non-automobile engines that significantly contribute to pollution in areas with poor air quality.

So far the agency has relied on weak international standards that provide no air quality benefits in U. S. waters, partly because many of the ships operating here are registered in foreign countries. Foreign-flagged ships operated by U. S. and other companies make more than 80 percent of port calls by ocean-going vessels. A review of international standards was recently delayed by nearly two years.

To attempt to address these failings, Senator Barbara Boxer recently introduced the Marine Vessel Emissions Act of 2007 (SB1499) that would require cleaner fuels and engines in all ocean-going vessels calling on U. S. ports. Congresswoman Hilda L. Solis introduced the same legislation in the House of Representatives (HR2548)

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