Title: Mercury Policy and Regulations
1Mercury Policy and Regulations
- Biying Gao, Elliot Hayden, Lizzie King
2Mercury - What is it and where it comes from
- - Forms of Mercury - Elemental, Inorganic and
Organic - Â Â Â - Methylmercury
- - Sources of Mercury
- Â Â Â - Natural sources
- Â Â Â - Anthropogenic
- Â Â Â Â Â Â - Combustion
- Â Â Â Â Â Â - Manufacturing
- Â Â Â Â Â Â - Mining
- Â Â Â - Re-mobilization
EPA (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency).
(1997). Mercury Study Report to Congress. Volume
VI An Ecological Assessment for Anthropogenic
Mercury Emissions in the United States
3Exposure to Mercury
- - Environmental Effects
- Â Â Â - Ecosystems
- Â Â Â Â Â Â - aquatic
- Â Â Â Â Â Â - terrestrial
- Â Â Â - Bioaccumulation
- Â
- - Health Effects
- Â Â Â - Consumption of fish
- Â Â Â - Dental amalgams
- Â Â Â - Spills, Products, Airborne Mercury
- Â Â Â - Minamata Disease
EPA (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency).
(1997). Mercury Study Report to Congress. Volume
VI An Ecological Assessment for Anthropogenic
Mercury Emissions in the United States
4Direct Effect
Environmental standards
Procuring/Using Mercury
Releasing Mercury
Air
Products -FIFRA -FFDCA
- Commerce
- Obtainment
- Excise Tax
- Import Tax
- SCMC Act
- Transporting
- HMTA
- Using
Biota
Mercury American Regulation Overview
5United States Clean Air Act, Background
- Specifies national standards for ambient air
quality (NAAQS) -
- Criteria" air pollutants are six commonly found
chemicals found nearly everywhere in the United
States where there is air pollution -
- Criteria for setting allowable levels of
"criteria" air pollutants based off of minimally
acceptable environmental/human health damages,
rather than econometrically-derived emissions
level - Additionally, sets National Emissions Standards
for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP's), which in
1990 began to follow a different criteria
emission levels EPA deems to be 'achievable'
(i.e. MACT) -
6Clean Air Act Amendments 1990
- Establishes market-based approach to regulating
emissions, including emissions trading and
performance-based standards -
- Prior to 1990, EPA promulgated rules under the
CAA for hazardous air pollutants "HAPs" one
chemical at a time - Between 1970 and 1990, EPA establishes rules
for only seven (7) chemicals - The 1990 Amendments required EPA to identify
categories of industrial sources for 187 listed
toxic air pollutants, given that a single
industry releases multiple chemicals at given time
7EPA's Maximum Achievable Control Technology
(MACT) Standards
- Performance-based standardsÂ
- Require sources to meet emission levels based on
abatement achievement by cleanest facilities - these levels establish the baseline, or "MACT
floor", that other firms within source category
must meetÂ
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13Clean Air Act-State Level
- Under the Title V Operating Permits program,
states may impose emissions fees up to 25/ton of
emissions for all chemicals. - Individual states may impose specific mercury
emissions limits on individual facilities. - Fact 21 states have adopted or are working on
rules that will require more mercury reduction
than the federal rule, including coal-producing
states such as Illinois and Pennsylvania . - http//ncseonline.org/NLE/CRSreports/07March/RL335
35.pdf
14Anecdotes Indiana
- Emissions from coal-fired power plants are by far
the biggest source of mercury emissions in
Indiana 5000 pounds per year. Indiana has the
fourth highest mercury emissions in the country
(total U.S. emissions are approximately 96,000
pounds per year).
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16Anecdotes Indiana (continue)
- Indiana Code IC 13-20-17 - Restrictions on
Batteries Containing Mercury - This law restricts the sale and distribution of
batteries containing mercury. - Indiana Code IC 13-20-17.5- Mercury and Mercury
Products Law - This law restricts the sale of mercury-added
novelties, thermometers, mercury compounds, and
equipment for use in school laboratories, and the
general sale of mercury-containing commodities. - Universal Waste Rule Guidance PDF - 45KB (329
IAC 3.1-16, incorporating 40 CFR 273) - The Universal Waste Rule is a modification of the
Hazardous Waste Rules, enacted under the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), which is
designed to reduce regulatory management
requirements so as to foster the environmentally
sound recycling or disposal of certain specified
categories of commonly generated hazardous
wastes.
17Fish Advisories
- For exposure of mercury from the ingestion of
contaminated non-commercial fish, primary
responsibility falls upon the state and local
government - consumption advisories
- group/location specific
- information symmetry as a policy tool
18Environmental Standards for Mercury--Water
19Clean Water Act
- Technology-based effluent limits
- Water quality standards for pollutants including
mercury - Permit systemnational pollutant discharge
elimination system (NPDES) - Publicly owned treatment plant (POTW)
- Regulatory Mechanism(s) effluent limits,
effluent fees (WI), permits, operating
requirements, control requirements,
monitoring/reporting
20Mercury use regulations
- Â - Commerce-related regulationsÂ
- Â Â Â - Obtaining Mercury
- Â Â Â Â Â Â - Excise Tax Internal Revenue Code of
1986 - Â Â Â Â Â Â - Import Tax Harmonized Tariff Schedule
of the United States - Â Â Â Â Â Â - Strategic and Critical Materials
Stockpile Act - Â Â Â - Transporting Mercury
- Â Â Â Â Â Â - The Hazardous Materials Transportation
Act - Â Â Â - Using Mercury
- Â Â Â Â Â Â - Minnesota use-restriction law
- - Product-related restrictions
- Â Â Â - Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and
Rodenticide Act (FIFRA)Â - Â Â Â - Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
(FFDCA) - - Reporting requirements
- Â Â Â - SARA 312 (threshold planning) - Michigan
21Global Background Control of Mercury
- Global convention
- Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air
Pollution and The 1998 Aarhus Protocol on Heavy
Metals - Mercury waste guidelines under Basel Convention
- International trade in mercury under Rotterdam
Convention - UNEP Global Mercury Negotiation and Partnership
- Global Legally Binding Instrument on Mercury
- UNEP Global Mercury Partnership Action Priorities
22Questions or Recommendations