coal combustion residuals
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O&M
Coal Ash Mapping Using Electromagnetic Technology
The identification and containment of coal ash has risen to the top of the priority list for plant managers across the U.S. after inadvertent releases of coal ash into unintended areas resulted in adverse
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Legal & Regulatory
Coal Ash Bill Clears U.S. House
The U.S. House of Representatives on July 23 passed by a 258–166 vote a coal ash bill that industry and states say is much-needed, but which the White House has threatened to veto. The Improving Coal Combustion Residuals Regulation Act of 2015 (H.R. 1734) sponsored by Rep. David McKinley (R-W.Va.) seeks to implement standards finalized […]
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Legal & Regulatory
EPA Issues Final Federal Requirements for Coal Ash Disposal
A final rule issued today by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to regulate coal combustion residuals (CCRs) from coal power plants clarifies technical requirements for coal ash landfills and surface impoundments nationwide under Subtitle D of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), the nation’s primary law for regulating solid waste. The final rule is […]
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Legal & Regulatory
A U.S. Power Industry Regulatory Update
The U.S. power sector has seen a number of developments on the regulatory front in recent months. Here’s where major federal rules stand today. (For a more dynamic and graphic version of this article, see http://powermag.com/long-form-stories/bw-power/ .) GHG Rules New Power Plants. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in September 2013 revised a 2012 proposal to […]
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- PM 2.5
- NRC
- 316(b)
- effluent limitation
- Clean Air Act
- GHG
- ozone
- Environmental
- Cooling water
- NAAQS
- existing power plants
- radiation protection
- ferc
- Clean Power Plan
- continued storage of spent nuclear fuel
- EPA
- critical infrastructure
- CIP standards
- carbon
- coal combustion residuals
- CSAPR
- Mercury
- BACT
- MATS
- cross-state
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Coal
Solid Coal Ash-Handling System Avoids Problems Associated with Wet and Dry Systems
Environmental and climate protection does not stop at the stack of a power plant. Disposal of separated combustion residuals, for example, must also be environmentally friendly. More and more nations are
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