Fuel Giant BP Polluting Lake Michigan

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    Fuel Giant BP Polluting Lake Michigan

    Aug. 2007  - A judge has agreed to hear a 
    petition by the Alliance for the Great Lakes challenging water pollution 
    discharge permit issued by the state of Indiana that allows fuel giant BP 
    to release more pollution into Lake Michigan from its refinery at Whiting, 
    Indiana, near Chicago. 
    The judge’s decision to set a hearing for October 30 came earlier this 
    week, days before BP announced Thursday that the company will adhere to 
    its previous pollution limits rather than take advantage of the new, 
    higher allowances afforded by Indiana regulators for a $3.8 billion 
    refinery expansion. 
    "The petitioner has stated sufficient facts to raise legal issues 
    regarding whether a legal exception applies in this instance," Judge 
    Catherine Gibbs wrote in her order. 
    This decision means that the Alliance can make its case that an appeal of 
    BP’s permit should be allowed despite the expiration of the 
    pre-established appeal period. 
    Filed August 15 with Indiana's Office of Environmental Adjudication, the 
    petition questions the state's handling of the discharge permit it granted 
    BP to expand its Whiting, refinery. It seeks both a stay of the permit and 
    a re-opening of the public appeal process. 
    While he is pleased with BP’s announcement that it will not increase 
    discharges into the lake, Alliance President Cameron Davis said the 
    Alliance will continue its legal challenge to ensure that commitment is 
    locked into place. 
    "Citizens have a right to ensure that government decisions affecting the 
    Great Lakes use the best policy, technology and efforts," Davis said. "The 
    real story here is that people want a new standard of care for the Great 
    Lakes. They don’t want to see the absence of more harm. They don’t want to 
    see the status quo. They want to see the region’s waterways proactively 
    restored." 
    BP wants to modernize the Whiting refinery so that it can process more 
    Canadian heavy crude oil. The company has obtained regulatory approval to 
    increase average daily discharge limits for ammonia from 1,030 to 1,584 
    pounds per day and for total suspended solids from 3,646 to 4,925 pounds 
    per day. 
    An outcry from Congressional, state and local politicians and the general 
    public arose when the Indiana Department of Environmental Management, 
    IDEM, granted the higher discharge limits in June. Indiana Governor Mitch 
    Daniels supports the BP expansion, which will bring billions to his state, 
    and has called the Alliance's position "horsefeathers." 
    The Alliance's lawsuit claims that IDEM shut the Alliance and other 
    stakeholders out of the formal appeal process by failing to notify them 
    that a final permit had been issued. 
    The agency now says the 15 day period in which the public could appeal the 
    permit – a period that starts as soon as interested parties receive notice 
    of the permit – has already expired. 
    BP America President Bob Malone said Thursday the company will seek new 
    technology to allow the increase in capacity while maintaining the lower 
    discharge limits. 
    "We're not aware of any technology that will get us to those limits but 
    we'll work to develop a project that allows us to do so," he said. "If 
    necessary changes to the project result in a material impact to project 
    viability, we could be forced to cancel it." 
    
    
    







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