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Massachusetts’ Power Plant Mercury Regulations

Massachusetts’ Power Plant Mercury Regulations. Sharon Weber Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection. WESTAR Fall Business Meeting - September 22, 2005 - San Diego, CA. Mercury Policy Context. New England Governors/Eastern Canadian Premiers’ Regional Mercury Action Plan

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Massachusetts’ Power Plant Mercury Regulations

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  1. Massachusetts’ Power Plant Mercury Regulations Sharon Weber Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection WESTAR Fall Business Meeting - September 22, 2005 - San Diego, CA

  2. Mercury Policy Context • New England Governors/Eastern Canadian Premiers’ Regional Mercury Action Plan • 50% reduction by 2003 • 75% reduction by 2010 • Virtual elimination of anthropogenic discharges of mercury is long term goal • MA Zero Mercury Strategy • 75% reduction by 2010 • Virtual elimination of anthropogenic discharges and use of mercury is long term goal

  3. MA Hg Emissions: Point Sources • Control efforts • 2000 regs. 3X more stringent vs. federal • 90-98% control • Source separation regs. • Control efforts: P2 • Health care • Products

  4. MA Hg Emissions: Area Sources

  5. Affected Facilities’ Contribution to Generation and Hg Emissions • The 4 facilities subject to the power plant mercury regulations represent 8% of 2003 New England megawatts of generating capacity • The 4 facilities emitted 17% of 2002 MA point source mercury emissions

  6. Major Provisions Effective May 11, 2001 • Standards • Output-Based Emission Rates - SO2, NOx, CO2 • Annual caps for CO2 (tons) and Hg (lbs) • Hg data collection for cap and 2003 proposed standard • Hg control feasibility report by December 2002 • Compliance schedules • Dates depend on compliance approach • standard path - 10/04 and 10/06 • repowering path - 10/06 and 10/08 • Hg cap effective at first compliance date

  7. Mercury Standard Setting Process • Regulation 310 CMR 7.29: Emissions Standards for Power Plants: promulgated May 11, 2001 • http://www.mass.gov/dep/bwp/daqc/files/regs/7c.htm#29 • Mercury coal/emissions baseline testing: 2001-2002 • Stakeholder meetings: Aug/Sep/Oct 2002, Jan 2003 • Feasibility Report: December 2002 • http://www.mass.gov/dep/bwp/daqc/daqcpubs.htm#other • Proposed regulation: September 2003 • Final regulation: released May, effective June 4, 2004 • http://www.mass.gov/dep/bwp/daqc/daqcpubs.htm#regs

  8. Mercury Data Collection • Sampling for concentration of mercury and chlorine in each shipment of coal received at the 4 coal-fired facilities from May 2001-August 2002 • Sampling for concentration of speciated mercury at inlet (pre-ESP) and outlet (stack) of 8 coal-fired units (3 sets of tests in summer 2001, winter 2001-2002, and summer 2002)

  9. Brayton 1 Emissions Test Results250 MW, Bituminous Coal

  10. Average Baseline Mercury Results by Unit

  11. Mercury Control Feasibility Report – December 2002 • “Evaluation of the Technological and Economic Feasibility of Controlling and Eliminating Mercury Emissions from the Combustion of Solid Fossil Fuel” • 85-90+% removal of flue gas Mercury is feasible

  12. Control Feasibility Report Technology Conclusions (1) • Mercury controls are technologically feasible • Some existing US power plant units are achieving up to 98% mercury removal • Some MA power plant units are already removing close to 90% of mercury • Controls to meet MA SO2 and NOx standards are expected to achieve mercury reduction co-benefits

  13. Control Feasibility Report Technology Conclusions (2) • Mercury controls are technologically feasible • DOE field testing shows >90% mercury removal • MA Municipal Waste Combustors are removing 90% of mercury; some ≥ 95% removal • Extensive funding for research has resulted in mercury control technologies that have reached the field testing stage

  14. Control Feasibility Report Economic Conclusions • Mercury controls are economically feasible • Sorbent-based mercury controls costs are similar to historically accepted NOx control costs (mills/kWh) • Multi-pollutant regs (like MA’s) improve cost-effectiveness

  15. Final Mercury StandardEffective June 4, 2004 • Form of the standard • Output-based and % control efficiency options • Level of the standard • Phase 1: 85% or 0.0075 lb/GWh by 1/1/2008 • Phase 2: 95% or 0.0025 lb/GWh by 10/1/2012 • Demonstrating compliance with the standard • Every other quarter stack tests 10/06-1/1/2008 • CEMs required beginning 1/1/2008 • Averaging time of the standard • Rolling 12-month basis

  16. Media Transfer & Off-Site Mercury Reductions • Facility mercury caps include mercury emissions due to on-site re-burn of ash or off-site high temperature processing in Massachusetts (e.g., use of ash in cement kiln or asphalt batching plant) • Mercury standards must be met while including mercury emissions due to on-site re-burn of ash • Units shutting down can use early or off-site reductions to 2010. Facilities emitting less than 5 lb in 2001 can use early or off site reductions to phase 2.

  17. Expected Annual Reductions due to 2001 and 2004 Standards • Mercury: 85% (about 155 pounds) • SO2: 50-75% (about 56,000-84,000 tons) • NOx: 50% (about 15,000 tons) • CO2: 10% (about 1,954,000 tons, implemented on-site or off-site)

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