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New Clean Air Rule Will Dramatically Reduce Air Pollution in New York

Release Date: 03/10/2005
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FOR RELEASE: Thursday, March 10, 2005

#05020) NEW YORK -- The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) today finalized a rule that will dramatically reduce the amount of pollution coming into the Empire State from other states and reduce pollution emissions in New York. EPA Acting Administrator Stephen Johnson signed the final Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR) today. CAIR will permanently cap emissions of sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) in the eastern United States. When fully implemented, CAIR will reduce SO2 emissions in 28 eastern states and the District of Columbia by more than 70 percent and NOx emissions by more than 60 percent from 2003 levels.

"CAIR will result in the largest pollution reductions and health benefits of any air rule in more than a decade," said Acting EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson. "The action we are taking will require all 28 states to be good neighbors, helping states downwind by controlling airborne emissions at their source."

"Each and every state must do its part to reduce air pollution because air pollution knows no boundaries," said Kathleen C. Callahan, Acting Regional Administrator. "Part of the challenge faced by states like New York is that a significant amount of pollution impacting the state comes from other states. This rule goes a long way toward addressing that problem."

At the end of 2004, 10 New York counties were designated as not attaining EPA's health-based standard for fine particle pollution. CAIR will help bring all of those counties into attainment by 2010. Thirty New York counties were also designated nonattainment for EPA's health-based standard for smog. Existing programs will bring 19 of these counties into attainment by 2010. CAIR will allow two more counties to come into attainment by 2015 and will reduce smog levels in the remaining nine
counties.

CAIR will result in more than $100 billion in health and visibility benefits per year by 2015 and will substantially reduce premature mortality in the eastern United States; these benefits will continue to grow each year with further implementation. The rule will save an estimated 17,000 lives, prevent about 22,000 non-fatal heart attacks and 240,000 asthma attacks nationally each year.

Next week, EPA is also scheduled to issue the first-ever requirement for coal-fired power plants to control mercury emissions. That action, plus today's CAIR rule, puts multi-pollutant controls in place for many of the largest sources of air pollution in the country.

We remain committed to working with Congress to help advance the President's Clear Skies legislation in order to achieve greater certainty and nationwide emission reductions," said Stephen Johnson. "But we need regulations in place now to help over 450 counties in the eastern United States protect people's health by meeting stringent new air quality standards."

Related Sites:
Clean Air Interstate Rule - New York
Clear Skies in New York