EPA to require municipal waste incinerators monitor for toxic emissions
Source: The Guardian
Thu 9 Jan 2025 08.00 EST
The EPA plans to require the nations municipal waste incinerators to monitor for dangerous air emissions, a move environmental groups have hailed as a major step toward reining in a staggering source of localized toxic air pollution that most frequently hits low-income neighborhoods.
Municipal incinerators stacks often spew hazardous pollutants like dioxins, particulate matter, PFAS, carbon monoxide, acid gases, or nitrogen oxides. The substances are linked to cancer, developmental disorders and other serious diseases, but still are burned with limited or patchwork oversight.
The new rule would require about 60 such facilities across the country to consider about 800 chemicals that are part of the federal toxic releases inventory. The data could be used to inform local residents about whats being emitted, litigate, alert first responders, increase monitoring, or inform state and federal regulators on how to set new pollution limits.
The EPA is doing the right thing, said Mike Ewall, executive director of the Energy Justice Network public health advocacy group. It co-led a citizens rulemaking petition signed by 300 environmental groups requesting the EPA take the step. This industry is worse than landfilling, dirtier than coal burning, and disproportionately impacts people of color, Ewall added.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/jan/09/epa-waste-toxic-air-emissions