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Page 1: Improving Air Quality: Controlling Stationary Sources

Improving Air Quality: Controlling Stationary Sources

Chapter 12

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1. Understanding Acidic Deposition

What is Acidic Deposition?• Occurs when sulfuric and nitric acids

mix with other airborne particles and fall to earth as wet or dry ____________

• These acids arise from the chemical reaction of SO2 and NOx emissions with water vapors and oxidants in atmosphere

• _____ is the more significant contributor– Major sources are fossil-fueled electricity

plants, refineries, and other users of sulfur-containing fuel

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2. Controlling Stationary Sources

Overview• Stationary sources include electric power plants,

chemical plants, steel mills, etc.

• Primary controls in the U.S. are ___________ _________________with _______________

___________ added over time

• These controls vary with – Facility age (new versus existing)– Facility location (PSD versus nonattainment area)

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(1) Technology-based Standards

Dual-Control Approach

• For new/modified stationary sources–____-administered stringent limits, New

Source Performance Standards (NSPS), are used; more stringent

• For existing stationary sources–_____-administered limits are used; less

stringent

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Setting the Control Technologies

• PSD areas (more stringent)– New sources: limits based on best available

control technology (BACT)– Existing sources: limits based on best

available retrofit technology (BART)

• Nonattainment areas (less stringent)– New sources: limits based on lowest

achievable emissions rate (LAER)– Existing sources: limits based on reasonable

available control technology (RACT)6

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(2) Emissions Trading

• For existing sources

– Bubble policy: plants can measure emissions of a single pollutant as an __________ of all emission points

– Emissions banking: a source can save __________________________ if it cuts emissions more than required by law and can deposit these through a banking program

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• For new/modified sources

– Netting: for use in _____ areas by modified sources; any added emissions associated with a plant modification must be exactly ________ by a reduction from some where else within that same plant

– Offset plan: for use in ________________ areas; uses emissions trading to allow releases from a new/modified source to be more than countered by reductions achieved by existing sources

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(3) Acid Rain Program: SO2 Emissions Allowance Trading

• ________ of the 1990 CAAA established a two-phase acid rain initiative, establishing:– a reduction plan for NOX emissions

– a cap and trade allowance program for SO2 emissions

• Phase I for the 1995–1999 period; phase II for the 2000–2009 period

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Cap and Trade Program for SO2

• National SO2 emissions caps established a permanent annual cap of _____ million tons for electric power plants starting in 2000, tightened to 8.95 million tons for 2010

• SO2 Emissions Allowance Program – EPA issues tradeable emission allowances: each

allowance permits the release of ______ of SO2 – Total number issued sets the national limit

• Auctions also are held for direct sale of allowances– Administered by the Chicago Board of Trade

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(4) Ozone Control: NOX Trading Programs • Established under CAAA 1990, the Ozone Transport

Commission (OTC) developed the OTC NOX Budget Program

• In 1998, a new initiative, the NOX SIP call, required affected states to submit revised State Implementation Plans (SIPs) to achieve certain emission limits during ozone season, starting in 2003– EPA recommended using a cap and trade program

and established the NOX Budget Trading Program (NBP) in 2003 as successor to the original OTC program

– Goal is to reduce NOX emissions by _________ _____ per year

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3. Analyzing Stationary Source Controls

(1) Higher Cost of CAC Methods

• Standards-based approach is _____________ – The inflexibility adds to society’s costs and

gives low-cost abaters no incentive to clean up beyond the level set by law

• Most empirical studies show that the cost of using a command-and-control instrument relative to the least-cost method is _________ than 1

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(2) New Source BiasDual Control Approach• Existing sources are controlled by states, which

have an incentive to set relatively _________ standards to avoid losing firms to other states

• In turn, firms have an incentive not to initiate new construction to avoid the more stringent and more costly NSPS

• Result is that the dual control approach perversely ____________ construction of new and presumably cleaner-running new facilities

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(3) Cost-effectiveness of Emissions Trading Programs

• Low-cost abaters will reduce emissions and sell excess allowances (suppliers)– Will sell at any P higher than their MAC

• High-cost abaters will buy allowances rather than abate (demanders)– Will buy at any P lower than their MAC

• Trading should continue until MACs are equal, achieving a cost-effective solution

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Polluter’s Abatement DecisionExample: SO2 Abatement

$

SO2 Abatement(millions of tons)

P of 1-ton allowance

MAC

A00

Up to A0, cheaperfor firm to abate;MAC < P

Beyond A0, cheaper forfirm to buy allowances;P < MAC

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An emissions cap: A limit on the total amount of pollution that can be emitted (released) from all regulated sources (e.g., power plants); the cap is set lower than historical emissions in order to reduce emissions.

Allowances: An authorization to emit a fixed amount of a pollutant.

Allowance trading: Sources can buy or sell allowances on the open market. Because the total number of allowances is limited by the cap, emission reductions are assured.

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