An air pollution
bill that was killed last year after coordinated lobbying by the
power industry and the Ehrlich administration was reintroduced
Thursday with 97 co-sponsors, suggesting a surge of support among
lawmakers.
Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller
and House Speaker Michael E. Busch said they expect the General
Assembly to pass during this session some form of the "Four
Pollutants" bill, renamed the Healthy Air Act. The legislation would
require coal-fired power plants to install equipment that would
limit mercury and other pollution.
The Sun reported last month that
Constellation Energy Corp. had worked behind the scenes with former
company officials now at the Maryland Department of the Environment
to derail the pollution legislation last spring.
Internal e-mails obtained through the
Public Information Act showed that state Environment Secretary Kendl
P. Philbrick had signed a letter to legislators arguing against the
bill, using a text supplied by Constellation's lobbyist.
Constellation is the largest owner of
power plants in Maryland. The company and others in the industry
argue that stricter state- level air regulations would be
ineffective because much of the air pollution in Maryland blows in
from the Midwest.
"Constellation Energy's position remains
that national and regional approaches are far more effective than
state by state approaches for addressing air pollution," said Rob
Gould, a company spokesman.
The chief sponsors of the Healthy Air
Act, Sen. Paul G. Pinsky and Del. James W. Hubbard, both Democrats
from Prince George's County, held a news conference in Annapolis
Thursday with several environmental and health groups to promote the
legislation.
Maryland Public Interest Research Group
released a report showing that the Baltimore area ranks ninth-worst
in the nation for soot pollution, down from 12th worst in 2003.
Pinsky and Hubbard said their bill would
require the state's seven largest coal-fired power plants to cut
sulfur dioxide pollution 83 percent by 2010, mercury 90 percent by
2010, nitrogen oxide 80 percent by 2015 and carbon dioxide 10
percent by 2018.
After opposing the air pollution bill
last year, the Ehrlich administration released proposed regulations
this month designed to reduce sulfur dioxide pollution by 85
percent, mercury pollution by 80 percent and nitrogen oxide
pollution by 69 percent, all by 2010.
The draft rules would not cover as many
power plants as the Healthy Air Act would and would allow the state
to exempt about half of the plants from some of the limits, though
state officials have since said they might drop the exemption
language. The rules would not reduce carbon dioxide, which is
thought to cause global warming and sea-level rise.
Busch said Thursday that he wants an air
pollution law "more expansive than the governor's proposal."
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