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October 9th, 2007

Coal pollution lawsuit settled as the whole game has changed

Posted by Harry Fuller @ 5:06 pm

Categories: Blogroll, air pollution, climate change, conservation, energy, engineering, federal government, fossil fuel, global warming, law & politics, state government

Tags: Game, Lawsuit, Settlement, Pollution, AEP, Litigation, Business Operations, Harry Fuller

Back in 1999 the federal government and other plaintiffs filed a lawsuit against American Electric Power. AEP was accused of violating the Federal Clean Air Act and causing acid rain with pollutants from its coal-burning generating plants. The plants are located in Ohio and the Appalachia region. AEP fought the suit for eight years, then settled just as the district court was to hand down a decison today from the 2005 trial in Columbus, Ohio. That’s where AEP is based. The AEP case had followed an April Supreme Court rurling against Duke Energy is a similar lawsuit. That may have triggered this settlement as legal costs mounted and AEP may not have been confident of winning.

Altogether the plaintiffs against AEP included the Environmental Protection Agency, eight states and fourteen environmental groups. They charged that AEP’s discharge of sulphur dioxide and nitrogen oxides had produced damaging acid rain along the Ohio River Valley and the mid-Atlantic States including Chesapeake Bay.

Here’s AEP’ ummary of the settlement. The company will pay sixty million for clean-up and abatement, fifteen million in damages (that’ll clearly go to the lawyers) and then spend billions upgrading their coal plants. The company says much of the work on the coal plants is already done or planned anyway.

Makes you recall those simpler times when the focus was on acid rain pollution. Nobody in the U.S. back then was doing much about global warming, CO2 levels, etc. Even though the Kyoto Protocol had been opened for signatures in December, 1997. As a result the settlement makes no mention of CO2 or greenhouse emissions.

The settlement sounded good to Wall Street so AEP’s stock price rose, as some market averages set new records on other economic news. Altogether it would appear the coal industry will continuing humming along tomorrow.

Harry FullerA newsman since 1969, Harry Fuller has worked for CBS, ABC, CNBC Europe, CNET and was founding news director at TechTV. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 2 Talkback(s)
Yes that's why the EPA
[url=http://www.epa.gov/acidrain/]has a link[/url] that discusses the real dangers of acid rain and how it is caused.

"Effects of Acid Rain - Human Health

Acid rain looks, feels, and
... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Linux User 147560 Posted on: 10/09/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Yeah  frgough | 10/09/07
Yes that's why the EPA  Linux User 147560 | 10/09/07

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