TITLE 9. ENVIRONMENT
AIR POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
Initial Agency Notice
Title of Regulation:
9VAC5-80. Permits for Stationary Sources.
Statutory Authority: § 10.1-1308 of the Code of
Virginia.
Name of Petitioner: Susan V. Coleman.
Nature of Petitioner's Request: As a citizen of the
Commonwealth of Virginia, I hereby petition the Department of Environmental
Quality's Air Pollution Control Board to simultaneously promulgate both an
emergency rulemaking and a formal rulemaking to limit and reduce total carbon
dioxide pollution in the Commonwealth by 30% by 2030, from its largest source,
electric generating units. The Air Pollution Control Board has clear legal
authority to limit and reduce carbon pollution and other greenhouse gases
(GHG), by powers vested by the Virginia Code (§§ 10.1-1300-1308).
Specifically, Virginia law provides that the Air Pollution Control Board
"shall have the power to promulgate regulations, including emergency
regulations, abating, controlling and prohibiting air pollution throughout or
in any part of the Commonwealth . . ." (§ 10.1-1308 A). Virginia law
clearly encompasses carbon dioxide in its legal definition of air pollution:
"Air pollution means the presence in the outdoor atmosphere of one or more
substances which are or may be harmful or injurious to human health, welfare or
safety, to animal or plant life, or to property, or which unreasonably
interfere with the enjoyment by the people of life or property"
(§ 10.1-1300). Moreover, the Air Pollution Control Board has already
identified carbon dioxide and other GHGs as a category of emissions that shall
be "subject to regulation" (9VAC5-85-30 C). Most importantly,
limiting and reducing carbon pollution would achieve the Board's charge to
prevent harm to "public health, safety or welfare; the health of animal or
plant life; [and] property, whether . . . recreational, commercial, industrial,
[or] agricultural" (9VAC5-10). As a nurse, I am working in the public
health sphere and believe the Air Pollution Control Board should limit and
reduce carbon pollution to protect human and economic health, because: Carbon
pollution is an immediate threat to human health and the economy: sea level
rise makes Virginia's coast one of the most imperiled places in the nation. As
sea levels continue to rise, storm surges become higher as well, making most of
the Hampton Roads region vulnerable to hurricane flooding. Without significant
infrastructure investment, Tangier Island may be uninhabitable by the end of
the century. Inland areas will see worsened flooding as well, due to heavy
storm precipitation, which increased 27% between 1958 and 2012 across the
Southeast. Henry Paulson's Risky Business Institute estimates there will be
$17.5 billion in additional sea-level rise damage and storm damage in Virginia
by 2030. We have a duty to exhibit moral leadership. Warmer temperatures also
increase ozone levels, aggravating lung diseases such as asthma, including in
Richmond, which already suffers some of the worst asthma rates in America. This
issue significantly and disproportionately impacts the youth of Virginia, both
in productivity and in quality of life. Carbon pollution immediately threatens
plant and animal life. Climate change will likely reduce the productivity of
livestock, which comprise the bulk of Virginia's farm commodities. Hotter
summers will likely reduce corn yields, one of Virginia's largest crop
commodities. In addition, the threat of emerging zoonotic diseases due to
climate changes not only threatens livestock, but human health. Veterinary,
environmental and human health are all inextricably linked. Injury to property,
both public and private, is already occurring today: the Norfolk Naval Base is
impacted in a variety of ways, including impaired electricity availability,
transportation inaccessibility, and piers that must be raised at a cost of $60
million each. Weakened armed forces bases pose a great risk to national
security. In addition to concerns of public health and safety, climate change
wreaks havoc on cross-sector stakeholders caused by displacement,
transportation and utility interruptions, and increases in disease incidence
related to flooding conditions and disrupted housing. The cost of prevention,
whether measured in dollars or lives impacted, is so much less than that of
attempting to recover after tragedy. The Air Pollution Control Board can cost
effectively limit and reduce carbon pollution by 30% from 2015 levels by 2030
because: Virginia already reduced carbon emissions by a similar amount between
2000 and 2015, while the state economy continued to grow. 30% by 2030 would be
similar to the amount required in Virginia by the U.S. EPA's Clean Power Plan,
which underwent significant economic analysis, and which Governor McAuliffe
already supports. Doing so would benefit the economy because clean energy
resources like solar, wind, and energy efficiency are now as affordable as, or
more affordable than, conventional carbon-based energy resources. For the
above-stated legal, economic, and human health and safety reasons, I hereby
petition the Air Pollution Control Board to initiate an emergency and formal
rulemaking.
Agency Plan for Disposition of Request: The State Air
Pollution Control Board, based on discussion and action at its March 16, 2017,
meeting and as required by Virginia law, is submitting notice of the petition
for publication in the Virginia Register of Regulations on April 17, 2017, and
announcing a public comment period. The public comment period begins on April
17, 2017, and closes on July 17, 2017. Following receipt of comments on the
petition, the board will consider whether to grant or deny the petition for
rulemaking. Board consideration will occur at a meeting of the board. Board
book material on the matter will be available approximately three weeks in
advance of the meeting.
Public Comment Deadline: July 17, 2017.
Agency Contact: Karen G. Sabasteanski, Department of
Environmental Quality, 629 East Main Street, P.O. Box 1105, Richmond, VA 23218,
telephone (804) 698-4426, or email ghg@deq.virginia.gov.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-14; Filed March 17, 2017, 11:53 a.m.