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Tag: New Hampshire

New England’s Warm Summer Leads to Slight Increase in Air Quality Alert Days

 

BOSTON – The EPA has confirmed that New Englanders experienced a slight increase in the number of unhealthy air quality days this year, compared to 2017. Based on preliminary data collected between March and September 2018, there were 28 days when ozone monitors in New England recorded ozone concentrations above levels considered healthy. By contrast, in 2017 there were 25 unhealthy ozone days in New England.

 

Hot, sunny, summery weather is conducive to ozone formation, and is variable from year to year. The 2018 summer was warmer than average in New England, and slightly warmer than the summer of 2017. Since 1983, New England has experienced a decrease in the number of unhealthy ozone days. In 1983, New England had 118 unhealthy days, compared with only 28 this year. This downward trend is due to a reduction in emissions that form ozone. The number of unhealthy days (when ozone concentrations exceed the 0.070 parts per million standard) vary from year to year, due to weather conditions.

 

The number of unhealthy ozone days in each state this summer, and for last summer are as follows:

 

State                                              2018 Ozone Exceedences       2017 Ozone Exceedences
Connecticut 23 20
Massachusetts 12 12
Rhode Island 12 6
New Hampshire 6 5
Maine 3 6
Vermont 1 1

 

"While we have made good progress reducing ozone pollution over the past several decades, more work needs to be done to ensure that people can enjoy good air quality, even during a hot and dry summer when conditions favor the formation of ground-level ozone," said EPA New England Regional Administrator Alexandra Dunn. "EPA is continuing to take action to reduce ozone pollution, so we are optimistic that air quality will continue to improve in New England."

 

In 2014, EPA finalized stringent standards for new cars sold after 2017. The automobile and gasoline rule, known as Tier 3, will help lower automobile pollution by a significant margin. The Tier 3 emissions standards for cars represent an additional 80% reduction of ozone causing pollution when compared to the average in 2014. EPA has also issued an update to the Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR), which will significantly reduce summertime nitrogen oxide (NOX) emissions from power plants in 22 states in the eastern U.S.

 

EPA recently finalized its designations for the 2015 ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS), and EPA is continuing to work with our state partners to implement these standards. In the Northeast, average ozone levels have dropped by nearly 20 percent since the year 2000. Nationally, emissions of nitrogen oxides – the key precursor to ozone – have dropped by over 40 percent in the last decade.

 

Ground-level ozone is formed when volatile organic compounds and oxides of nitrogen chemically react in the presence of sunlight. In New England, cars and trucks give off the majority of the pollution that makes ozone. Burning of fossil fuels at electric power plants, which run at high capacities on hot days, emit substantial amounts of ozone-making pollution. Gasoline refilling stations, print shops, household products like paints and cleaners, as well as gasoline-powered lawn and garden equipment, also contribute to ozone formation.

 

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Manchester, New Hampshire Municipal Waste Incinerator to Reduce Mercury Emissions Under Settlement with United State

 

BOSTON – The City of Manchester, New Hampshire, will install equipment to limit the amount of mercury pollution emitted from a city-owned incinerator under an agreement between the city, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Department of Justice. The city estimates it will spend more than $6 million to comply with the terms of this settlement, which includes installing and operating pollution control equipment at the incinerator.

 

"This agreement means cleaner air for communities in Manchester and improves the city's compliance with important clean air laws," said EPA New England Regional Administrator Alexandra Dunn. "EPA is committed to working with cities like Manchester to reduce air pollution from sewage sludge incinerators in order to protect public health."

 

The consent decree lodged in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Hampshire, provides a July 11, 2019 deadline, for the facility to commence operation of a mercury control system, and requires that the facility meet all other related Clean Air Act regulations by January 12, 2020. In the interim, Manchester will take measures to limit the mercury content of sewage sludge received at the incinerator. The facility will also pay a civil penalty of $131,800.

 

The City of Manchester sewage sludge incinerator processes sewage waste from Manchester and three neighboring communities. Incineration of sewage sludge results in emissions of various pollutants, including mercury, dioxins and furans, cadmium, lead, and carbon monoxide.

 

Under federal Clean Air Act rules that became effective in 2016, owners of sewage sludge incinerators must meet stringent emissions standards for 10 pollutants, must test their emissions, and must institute procedures to limit emissions. The Manchester facility failed to meet the compliance deadline for mercury emissions and for various other requirements of the rules. The City of Manchester worked with EPA on the compliance plan and schedule, set forth in the proposed consent decree, which are designed to ensure it complies with the emissions standards for all 10 pollutants.

 

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Gould Electronics Helps Repay Cost of Drinking Water Lines in Atkinson, New Hampshire

MASSACHUSETTS – Under an agreement with U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) New England Office, Gould Electronics Inc., has paid $1.9 million to EPA for the Agency's costs to construct drinking water line extensions to homes with contaminated wells at the New Hampshire Dioxane Site located in Atkinson, New Hampshire. EPA constructed the drinking water line extensions in 2014.

 

"This settlement demonstrates EPA's effort to provide safe drinking water to the residents of Atkinson without taxpayers having to bear this burden alone," said EPA New England Regional Administrator Alexandra Dunn. "When EPA is able to recover federal cleanup costs from entities responsible for pollution, it saves taxpayer dollars."

 

The site includes a residential neighborhood in Atkinson, and extends to include property in Hampstead. From about 1984 to about 2004, Johnson and Johnston Associates, Inc., manufactured metal foil products for the circuit board industry here. EPA has alleged that Gould is the legal successor to Johnson and Johnston, which Gould bought in 1999.

 

Groundwater sampling in 2011 and 2012 by the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services found hazardous substances, including elevated levels of 1,4 dioxane, in nearby residential drinking water wells. This synthetic industrial chemical, used as a stabilizer in solvents, can cause eye, nose, and throat irritation and is a likely human carcinogen.

 

In June 2013, EPA determined that groundwater contamination at the manufacturing location exceeded EPA's acceptable standards and posed a threat to human health in the nearby drinking water wells. A response action over the next year extended a drinking water line and connected homes with residential wells containing 1,4 dioxane above the state standard.

 

More information: Administrative Record for the removal action:  https://semspub.epa.gov/src/collections/01/AR/NHN000106120

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