Ignoring Health Risk, EPA To Authorize Air Pollution Increases Nationwide
(August 22, 2003 - Boulder, CO) The Bush administration is preparing to finalize some of the most far-reaching anti-clean air measures in the history of the Clean Air Act. According to government records, on August 1, 2003, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency submitted sweeping rollbacks to the Clean Air Act’s “new source review” for final White House review. If finalized, the changes would allow thousands of power plants, pulp and paper mills, chemical plants, and other industrial facilities nationwide to substantially increase air pollution in surrounding communities without having to meet long-standing clean air safeguards.
“This is the single most destructive anti-clean air rule in the history of the Clean Air Act,” said Environmental Defense senior attorney Vickie Patton. “The Bush administration is preparing to eliminate vital, cost-effective clean air measures that have protected Americans from the harmful effects of industrial air pollution for a quarter century.”
EPA data indicates that even without the impending rollbacks, large pollution sources such as power plants release about 11.4 million tons of harmful sulfur dioxide and 5.2 million tons of smog-forming nitrogen oxides each year, comprising 62% and 21% of the national totals for these contaminants.
“This decision will mean more pollution in our cities and communities, more pollution for our families and children and less accountability and responsibility for America’s largest polluters,” Patton said. “Americans want polluters to clean up their act, but the Bush administration is helping them do the exact opposite.”
The traditional “new source review” program adopted in the 1977 Clean Air Act amendments has long required old, high-polluting sources such as power plants to prevent pollution increases that would worsen unhealthy air quality in urban centers or adversely impact national parks. By contrast, the administration’s initiative would allow virtually all air pollution increases from old, high-polluting sources to go unregulated. Specifically, the EPA is preparing to finalize new rules that would broadly exclude existing industrial sources from the long-standing requirement to modernize pollution controls by imposing an arbitrary economic test that would exempt major pollution-increasing activity from clean air protections.
With more than 3 million members, Environmental Defense Fund creates transformational solutions to the most serious environmental problems. To do so, EDF links science, economics, law, and innovative private-sector partnerships to turn solutions into action. edf.org
Latest press releases
-
AGREE, EDF, and Rewiring America Secure Progress Towards Heat Pump-Friendly Electric Rates in Con Edison Rate Case
November 6, 2025 -
New Environmental Defense Fund Report Urges New York City to Take Unified Approach to Housing and Climate Crisis to Protect Communities from Future Displacement
November 6, 2025 -
EDF, Allies File Comments Urging the Trump EPA to Continue the Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program
November 3, 2025 -
Climate Workforce Summit by Ashoka University and EDF Sparks Cross-Sector Collaboration to Accelerate India’s Green Transition
November 1, 2025 -
Cost of Trump Administration’s Mandates to Keep Michigan Coal Plant Open Balloons to $80 Million
October 31, 2025 -
EDF Strengthens Role in Ocean-Climate Governance with New Consultative Status at the IMO’s London Convention and Protocol
October 31, 2025