Investments

Search
Directory
Links

Create the future you want! Learn to make money online. Visit our website and start today!  www.exclusivebizopps.com

A Level Field On Pollution At Power Plants

Bank Of America Investment The Bush administration is considering major changes in longstanding rules that require new power plants to be cleaner than old ones. Environmentalists and many in Congress are crying foul, saying that the Clean Air Act's New Source Review program is the cornerstone of meaningful environmental regulation. But these critics are wrong on their own terms.

Locke described the bill as having the strongest standards in the nation for new power plants, which he said are the No. 1 source of carbon dioxide pollution. The legislation, which gives the force of state law to rules Locke issued last fall, requires future power plants to offset 20 percent of their carbon dioxide emissions by planting trees, powered buses or taking other steps to curb pollution. Existing plants will not be affected.

Investment Opportunity The New Source Review retards environmental progress and wastes resources. To assure sustainable environmental progress, NSR should be replaced with effective and efficient policies.

    Monitor keeps tabs on important power plant levels for peak performance without harmful temperatures programmed for your specific year, make and model diesel truck Monitor displays transmission oil temperature, EGTs and turbo boost levels all at once (Also available in a display model showing only oil temps and EGTs)
  • Flashes an unmistakable alert when any readout is reaching a dangerous level or for braggina rights!
  • Adjustable display brightness gives you complete driving comfort Monitor mounts low to keep your field of vision clear
  • Includes all hardware and necessary pyrometer lines for installation (varies by vehicle)
  • Can be installed to monitor EGTs before the turbo or at the exit on mount included with the kit year warranty

Banc Of America Investment The requirement for New Source Review under the Clean Air Act dates back to the 1970s. The lawyers and engineers who wrote the law thought they could secure environmental progress by imposing tougher emission standards on new power plants (and certain other emission sources) than on existing ones. The theory was that emissions would fall as old plants were retired and replaced by new ones. But experience over the past 25 years has shown that this approach is both excessively costly and environmentally counterproductive.

Everyone agrees the Detroit Edison power plant here, which President Bush visited today, - but of what Bush came to demonstrate how, under his policies, power plants could be expanded and upgraded without any increase in air pollution. He said Monroe is a "living example" air rules for the nation's oldest, - allowing the plant to modernize and "continue doing a good job of protecting the quality of the air."

Banking Investment The reason is that it motivates companies to keep old (and dirty) plants operating, and to hold back investments in new (and cleaner) power generation technologies.

"Plants can have a vital role in clearing carcinogens and other unstable organic chemicals from household air, " says B. C. "Bill" Wolverton, Ph.D., a former NASA senior scientist who has studied plants and pollution treatment for more than 20 years. "They can make a significant difference in the pollution levels in your home."

Investment Solution Strategic Not only does the New Source Review deter investment in newer, cleaner technologies, it also discourages companies from keeping power plants maintained. Plant owners contemplating maintenance activities must weigh the possible loss of considerable regulatory advantage if the work crosses a murky line between upkeep and new investment. Protracted legal wrangling is inevitable over whether maintenance activities have crossed a threshold sufficient to justify forcing an old plant to meet new plant standards. The deferral of maintenance compromises the reliability of electricity generation plants, and thereby increases the risk of outages.

In your March 23 story on mercury pollution from power plants ("Plan to cut mercury favors utilities"), you report that the Bush administration is repeating industry's claims that technology doesn't exist that would allow power plants to make 90 percent mercury emission reductions by 2008, as the Clean Air Act requires.

Investment Banking Services Research has demonstrated that the New Source Review process drives up costs tremendously (not just for the electricity companies, but for their customers and shareholders, that is, for all of us) and has resulted in worse environmental quality than would have occurred if firms had not faced this disincentive to invest in new, cleaner technologies.

Bank Investment NSR is reminiscent of the misguided 1970s effort to regulate differentially the price of old and new oil, which likewise created perverse incentives and spawned innumerable lawsuits.

Alternative Investment That unworkable policy was replaced. It is time to take similar action with New Source Review.

Online Investment Services The solution is a level playing field, where all electricity generators have the same environmental requirements, whether plants are old or new. The best approach is to cap total pollution and use an emissions trading system to assure that any emission increases at one plant are balanced by offsetting reductions at another. No matter how emissions are initially allocated across plants, the owners of existing plants and those who wish to build new ones will then face the correct incentives with respect to retirement decisions, investment decisions, and decisions regarding the use of alternative fuels and technologies to reduce pollution.

Accompany Essential Investment Of course, power generators and environmentalists may have different views regarding which pollutants should be capped and at what levels. As we seek to craft policies to replace the New Source Review, it will be important to weigh carefully the arguments presented by both sides regarding the environmental advantages and costs of alternative targets.

Investment Company To date, the evidence suggests that it is both feasible and desirable to set caps that would substantially reduce emissions of nitrogen oxides, mercury, and sulfur dioxide from their current levels.

Investment Management Solution As caps for the relevant pollutants are put in place by Congress, the New Source Review should be phased out. In the meantime, explicit New Source Review thresholds - such as spending more than 3 to 5 percent of a plant's value on maintenance procedures - should be established to reduce disincentives for maintenance due to uncertainty. Where to set these thresholds is a matter of dispute between the administration and environmentalists, as both sides seek leverage for upcoming debates in Congress. Neither side comes to the table with completely clean hands.

Investment Management Services But this short-run maneuvering should not detract attention from the importance of moving beyond NSR.

Guide Investment Stock It is not only possible, but eminently reasonable to be both a strong advocate for environmental protection and a strong advocate for the elimination of New Source Review. And that is where the evidence leads us.

Investment Manual Solution By Howard Gruenspecht and Robert Stavins

Investment Stock Howard Gruenspecht is a resident scholar in the Energy and Natural Resources Division of Resources for the Future in Washington. Robert Stavins is the Albert Pratt Professor of Business and Government at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University

Essential Investment Solution Boston Globe - 1/26/2002

Topic: Air Pollution

[ Comment, Edit or Article Submission ]

Share this:

Add To Del.icio.us Add To Reddit Add To Yahoo MyWeb Add To Google Bookmarks Add To Furl Fav This With Technorati Add To Newsvine Add To Bloglines Add To Ask Add To Windows Live Add To Slashdot Stumble This Digg This

More about:

Oct November 2008 Dec
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30            

Related Blog of Investments on Sphere Investments Blog on Technorati

Investments

Copyright © 2008 www.aboutinvestments.co.uk. All rights reserved. Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional

Analyze My Career Aptitude Tests Personality Tests