Main Title |
EPA's proposed MACT floor standards for mercury emissions from coal-fired utility units : a statistical and analytical assessment : a white paper / |
Other Authors |
|
Publisher |
Department of Environmental Protection, Division of Science, Research & Technology, |
Year Published |
2005 |
OCLC Number |
57757094 |
Subjects |
Mercury
|
Internet Access |
|
Holdings |
Library |
Call Number |
Additional Info |
Location |
Last Modified |
Checkout Status |
EJBD |
TD427.M4 A93 2004 |
|
Headquarters Library/Washington,DC |
03/04/2005 |
|
Collation |
12 p. ; 28 cm. |
Notes |
Includes bibliographical references. |
Contents Notes |
In concluding that it was essential to identify and quantify variability, EPA failed to consider data on management of mercury variability from operating facilities -- Variability is best addressed by tailoring the form of the standard to account for variability -- EPA attempted to quantify variability in short-term peak emissions, even though the essential question for compliance with EPA's proposed standards is variability in long-term average emissions -- Although EPA relied heavily on the chlorine content of coal in estimating mercury emissions, there is no evidence of a significant correlation between the chlorine content of a sample of coal and the ability to control mercury emissions when that sample is burned -- EPA's estimation of mercury emissions using equations based on coal chlorine content is invalid -- Because the equations based on coal chlorine did not have strong value in predicting mercury emissions, the EPA's distributions of emissions estimates based in part on those equations are questionable -- EPA's selection of 97.5th percentile values could potentially be helpful in projecting peak emissions, but substantially overstates expected the average annual emissions that are relevant to the standard EPA actually proposed -- By treating EPA's 97.5th percentile value estimates as "data," and then determining means and upper confidence interval limits of those "data," EPA further overstated mercury emissions from the best performing 12% -- Even though a bituminous-fired unit could become a subbituminous-fired unit with little or no modification, EPA set a substantially higher emission limit for subbituminous-fired units, encouraging fuel swithching that would bring substantially higher mercury emissions. |
Place Published |
Trenton, NJ : |
Access Notes |
Available on the World Wide Web. Viewed: 02/28/2005. |
Corporate Au Added Ent |
New Jersey. Dept. of Environmental Protection. Division of Science & Research. |
PUB Date Free Form |
2004. |
BIB Level |
m |
Cataloging Source |
OCLC/T |
OCLC Time Stamp |
20050228094814 |
Language |
eng |
Origin |
OCLC |
Type |
CAT |
OCLC Rec Leader |
02783nam 2200253Ka 45020 |