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Throughout the Southern Appalachians, air quality has suffered
drastically over the last several decades. While automobile exhaust
and other mobile sources contribute to the decreasing air quality,
large electric utilities that continue to operate generating facilities
in violation of Clean Air Act (CAA) rules are the main source of
increased air pollution. These plants, which are responsible by
law for obtaining the necessary permits and installing required
pollution control equipment before increasing emissions, have instead
undergone major modifications in violation of the CAA.
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The view from Look
Rock Tower in Great Smoky Mountains National Park -- on a
GOOD day
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The same view -- on
a BAD day
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The Southern Appalachians are uniquely positioned to receive the
brunt of much of this pollution, trapping at the higher elevations
the airborne pollutants blown eastward by the prevailing winds from
large utilities and industrial centers in West Virginia, the Ohio
Valley, northern Alabama, and western Tennessee. These pollutants--precursors
to acid rain, smog, and ground-level ozone--are responsible for
increased mortality and respiratory failure, especially in children
and the elderly. Acid rain and ozone destroy living tissue in plants
and are responsible for tree death at higher elevations along the
Appalachian ridges. Stream acidification destroys aquatic life and
sterilizes native trout streams. The crown jewels of the National
Park System, the Great Smoky Mountains and Shenandoah National Parks,
are so besieged by bad air that visibility of the magnificent mountain
vistas is reduced to but a fraction of what it once was, and higher-elevation
spruce and oak forests are denuded.
While the passage of the North Carolina Clean Smokestacks Act of
2002 helped point the way for a regional approach to addressing
these problems, the Bush administration has been actively working
to reverse decades of air-quality improvement as a result of the
passage of the Clean Air Act over 30 years ago. The Bush administration's
"Clear Skies (or Clear Lies) Initiative" is a blatant
attempt to hand control of pollution back to the polluters, and
the Administration's recent re-writing of the New Source Review
(NSR) provisions of the CAA will drastically increase emissions
of chemical refineries, industrial plants, and utilities.
The Southern Appalachian Highlands Ecoregion has taken the lead
in working with partner organizations in the region to hold one
utility, in particular, accountable for its excessive emissions.
The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) is the subject of three different
lawsuits targeting four of its coal-fired generators in Tennessee
and Alabama. The aim of this litigation is to force TVA into compliance
with both the NSR provisions and opacity (soot) emissions regulated
by the Clean Air Act and state plans.
But litigation alone is not enough, and SAHE is pursuing an aggressive
campaign of public education on the clean air issue, targeting folks
who have the opportunity to experience first-hand the effects of
these emissions: visitors to the region's national parks. Beginning
in 2004, SAHE will regularly distribute literature and advocacy
material at Great Smoky Mountains and Shenandoah national parks,
getting the message out that "We can do better," if we
renounce the Bush administration's efforts to hand our air back
to the very industries that made it bad, and instead do what we
have done to date: supporting and strengthening the Clean Air Act,
and working to bring accountability and responsibility to these
polluting industries and their apologists in the Bush administration.
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