February 2015

AFP: Arkansas Legislators Should Stand Up to the EPA…

The Times Record  / Read Full Article


December 2013

Turk Power Plant Receives Additional Recognition

The awards continue to stack up for Southwestern Electric Power Company's Turk Power Plant, as ENRTexas & Louisiana magazine releases its December 2013 Best Projects Awards issue.

Engineering News Record has awarded the Turk Plant its Best Project Winner in the Energy/Industrial Category, and Best Safety Award Winner in the two-state area. The winning applications were submitted by and awarded to Chicago Bridge and Iron (CB&I), the first engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractor on the Turk site.

CB&I was the lead commissioning team and accounted for about 80 percent of the 12.8 million work-hours at Turk, including site prep work, foundations, water treatment facilities, water supply infrastructure, coal handling and fly-ash systems, steam turbine installation and piping, electrical and instrumentation. The second EPC firm on site, Babcock and Wilcox (B&W), erected the equipment and piping needed for the steam generator and air quality control equipment.

According to the CB&I application, the team was able to accomplish first fire on gas to commercial operation date (COD on Dec. 20, 2012) in only 121 days, which was an industry first for a pulverized coal plant of that size (600 megawatts). The outstanding construction quality and craftsmanship at Turk was demonstrated by the fact that all control systems were in automatic control on COD, and the facility's availability factor was 99.7 percent during CB&I's contractual reliability run. "What makes these projects the best of the best are the extraordinary achievement of teamwork to meet difficult challenges and to produce award-winning results," boasts ENR.

Supporting documentation commends the workers who had the dedication and drive to put safety and quality first even in the face of obstacles, such as near historical rainfall amounts, and the work force powered through one of the hottest and driest summers on record in 2012. CB&I used a clean pipe program which resulted in a quicker chemical clean, turbine oil flush, and steam blow cleaning of the high-energy piping.

The safety culture was the number-one priority of site management. Job Safety Assessments were held daily with the work force before, during and after each work task. Before going to work, construction hands had to take site specific safety orientations, fall protection, electrical tag-out, fire watch, man-lift safety and confined space training. CB&I performed 13 different safety audits weekly to ensure compliance.

The Turk Power Plant has previously been honored as the Edison Award Winner by Edison Electric Institute; and selected as the 2013 Plant of the Year Award Winner by Power Magazine. The plant is a finalist in the 2012 Project of the Year in Best Coal-fired Project category by Power Engineering, with the winner to be announced Nov. 11; and a finalist in the 2013 Global Energy Award-Premier Project for Construction category by Platts, with the winner to be announced Dec. 12.


June 2012

Senate Doctors: Utility MACT Kills Jobs, Increases Health Risks

[ii] 42 USC 7408 and 42 USC 7409. 

(Energy Biz)  Today, U.S. Senators and Doctors John Barrasso, M.D. (R-WY), Tom Coburn, M.D. (R-OK), Rand Paul, M.D. (R-KY) and John Boozman, O.D. (R-AR) wrote President Obama outlining the negative health impacts of high unemployment.

Jun 19, 2012 — Congressional Documents and Publications/ContentWorks

Today, U.S. Senators and Doctors John Barrasso, M.D. (R-WY), Tom Coburn, M.D. (R-OK), Rand Paul, M.D. (R-KY) and John Boozman, O.D. (R-AR) wrote President Obama outlining the negative health impacts of high unemployment. In their letterthe Senators and Doctors call on President Obama to stop pushing expensive Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulations, like Utility MACT, that put Americans out of work and into the doctor’s office. They also call on federal agencies to include negative health impacts of unemployment into the cost/benefit analysis of regulations.”As you know, proponents of your EPA’s aggressive agenda claim that regulations that kill jobs and cause electricity prices to skyrocket will somehow be good for the American people. We come to this issue as medical doctors and would like to offer our ‘second opinion’: EPA’s regulatory regime will devastate communities that rely on affordable energy, children whose parents will lose their jobs, and the poor and elderly on fixed incomes that do not have the funds to pay for higher energy costs,” the Senators wrote.

TEXT OF THE LETTER:

June 18, 2012

The Honorable Barack Obama

PresidentUnited States of America

The White House

Dear President Obama:

We are writing to express our concern that the barrage of regulations coming out of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) designed to end coal in American electricity generation will have a devastating effect on the health of American families. Just before you made the decision to withdraw EPA’s plan to revise its ozone standard – a plan which would have destroyed hundreds of thousands of jobs – your former White House Chief of Staff Bill Daley asked the question “What are the health impacts of unemployment?” Today, we are requesting that you consider your former aide’s question carefully: instead of putting forth rules that create great economic pain which will have a terrible effect on public health, we hope that going forward, you will work with Republicans to craft polices that achieve both environmental protection and economic growth.

As you know, proponents of your EPA’s aggressive agenda claim that regulations that kill jobs and cause electricity prices to skyrocket will somehow be good for the American people. We come to this issue as medical doctors and would like to offer our “second opinion”: EPA’s regulatory regime will devastate communities that rely on affordable energy, children whose parents will lose their jobs, and the poor and elderly on fixed incomes that do not have the funds to pay for higher energy costs. The result for public health will be disastrous in ways not seen since the Great Depression.

One of the centerpieces of your administration’s efforts to stop American coal development is the Utility MACT rule – a rule that has such severe standards it will cause as much as 20 percent of the existing coal-fired power plant fleet to retire. Combined with numerous other actions by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Interior Department, and Army Corps of Engineers targeting surface coal mining operations, these rules constitute an aggressive regulatory assault on American coal producers, which will hit areas of the heartland – the Midwest, Appalachia, and the Intermountain West – the hardest. The end result will be joblessness across regions of the country whose livelihoods depend on coal development. Joblessness will lead to severe health impacts for communities in these regions.

With regard to the health benefits that EPA claims for Utility MACT, EPA’s own analysis shows us that over 99 percent of the benefits from the rule come from reducing fine particulate matter (PM2.5), not air toxics. But EPA also states that “[over 90 percent] of the PM2.5-related benefits associated with [Utility MACT] occur below the level of the [NAAQS].”[i]

Not only are PM emissions distinct from mercury and other toxics, but they are also subject to other regulatory regimes. For example, Section 108 of the Clean Air Act directs the EPA to set PM emission levels that are “requisite to protect the public health”.[ii] Thus, EPA is either double-counting the PM benefits already being delivered by existing regulatory regimes, or setting standards beyond those required to protect public health.

EPA estimates that the cost of the rule will be around $11 billion annually, but that it will yield no more than $6 million in benefits from reducing mercury and other air toxics. So by the agency’s own calculations, Utility MACT completely fails the cost/benefit test.

When looking at this analysis, the only conclusion is that Utility MACT, as well as the many other EPA rules that cost billions but yield few benefits are not about public health. They are about ending coal development and the good paying jobs it provides.

We are not the only members in the medical field that are concerned about the effects of a jobless economy on the health and well-being of Americans. Dr. Harvey Brenner of Johns Hopkins University testified on June 15th, 2011 before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee explaining that unemployment is a risk factor for elevated illness and mortality rates. In addition, the National Center for Health Statistics has found that children in poor families are four times as likely to be in bad health as wealthier families.

Economists have also studied this issue. A May 13th, 2012 Op-Ed in the New York Times by economists Dean Baker and Kevin Hasset entitled “The Human Disaster of Unemployment” found that children of unemployed parents make 9 percent less than children of employed parents. The same article cites research by economists Daniel Sullivan and Till von Wachter who found that unemployed men face a 25 percent increase in the risk of dying from cancer.

These are just a few examples of the numerous reports warning of a looming public health crisis due to unemployment. A more thorough evaluation of this problem can be found in a recently released report entitled, “Red Tape Making Americans Sick–A New Report on the Health Impacts of High Unemployment” which we are including here for your review.

The EPA should immediately stop pushing expensive regulations that put Americans out of work and into the doctor’s office. We respectfully ask that your agencies adequately examine the negative health implications of unemployment into the cost/benefit analysis of the numerous regulations that are stifling job growth, before making health benefit claims to Congress and the public.

We ask that instead of exacerbating unemployment and harming public health that you work with us in our efforts to implement policies that achieve true health benefits without destroying jobs, and indeed American coal development, in the process.

[i] US EPA, Regulatory Impact Analysis,” ES -4 .