Campaign Becomes Ground Zero for National Environmental/Citizens Groups
How green is Chicago?
Thanks to a growing ward-by-ward grassroots campaign for clean energy, the Windy City has attracted the attention of national environmental and citizens organizations to ask that very question.
On Thursday, July 15th at Dvorak Park, Alderman Joe Moore and Dorian Breuer, of the Pilsen Environmental Rights & Reform Organization, will be joined by an unusually broad coalition of fellow aldermen, clean energy and health care activists, and over 50 Chicago organizations, along the Sierra Club‘s Executive Director Michael Brune and Greenpeace National Climate Director Damon Moglen to call on Mayor Daley and the Chicago City Council to adopt the nationally acclaimed Clean Power Coalition energy platform.
Thirteen aldermen have signed onto Moore’s breakthrough Clean Power Ordinance, which calls for reducing pollution at the city’s two notorious coal-fired plants by 90 percent.
With one of the worst asthma rates in the nation, the Fisk Generation Station in Pilsen and Crawford Power Plant in Little Village–where nearly 50,000 tons of toxic pollution have led to atrocious health care rates over the past three years–were built before the invention of the Model T.
The CO emissions from the two plants are equivalent to the pollution of nearly 875,000 cars. Continue reading »
http://cbs2chicago.com/wireapnewsil/Chicago.lawmakers.push.2.1629376.html
Associated Press | April 14, 2010 | MICHAEL TARM
CHICAGO (AP) Chicago lawmakers proposed new clean air regulations Tuesday
that they say would be among the toughest in the nation and curb emissions
from the city's two coal-burning power plants.
Advocates say the two large plants, set in heavily populated South Side
neighborhoods, long have been among the city's worst polluters, pumping out
thousands of tons of soot and millions of tons of gases linked to global
warming.
The ordinance would require the Fish and Crawford plants to cut particulate
emissions by 90 percent from existing levels by installing modern pollution
controls.
"When this legislation passes, Chicago will do what no other large city in
America has had the guts to do: Clean up a dirty power plant within its
jurisdiction," said Joe Moore, a Chicago alderman and one of the architects
of the proposed ordinance.
Chicago is the only large U.S. city with two coal-driven power stations
within its city limits, creating a greater potential threat to the
environment and public health, environmentalists say. The plants haven't
been subject to more stringent rules imposed on newer plants because they
were built before the Clean Air Act.
The plants emit more than 14,300 tons of soot and other air pollutants each
year, contributing to high rates of asthma and other maladies among
Chicago-area residents, said Brian Urbaszewski, of the Respiratory Health
Association of Metropolitan Chicago.
"Why should people wait patiently when they are becoming patients?"
Urbaszewski said. "We need clean air now."
The plants also are two of the city's largest contributors of greenhouse gas
emissions, releasing nearly 5 million metric tons of carbon dioxide into the
atmosphere in 2007 - the equivalent of the emissions of 870,000 cars,
according to the Chicago Clean Power Coalition.
"The soot and the particulates don't stop at ward borders, they go across
the entire city, they go across the Midwest, they go across the entire
world," said Alderman Scott Waguespack, another supporter of the ordinance.
He and other advocates said city action is needed because existing state and
federal regulations aren't stringent enough.
But the owner of the plants, Chicago-based Midwest Generation, said the
ordinance is unnecessary because it has reduced many emissions since buying
the plants 10 years ago, including cutting nitrogen oxides by 60 percent,
and it plans further steps over coming months and years.
"The proposed ordinance is a solution in search of a problem," company
spokesman Douglas McFarlan said in a written statement. "Not only is it
unnecessary and misguided - it's essentially intended to force the closure
of two power plants that help maintain a reliable supply of electricity."
The plants generate enough power to provide electricity to 1 million homes,
according to Midwest Generation.
About 100 environmental activists gathered in a hallway near Chicago Mayor
Richard M. Daley's office Tuesday to call for passage of the ordinance,
several holding placards reading, "Clean Energy Now" and "Close Crawford and
Fisk."
Daley hasn't yet said whether he supports the ordinance, and Environment
Commissioner Suzanne Malec-McKenna did not immediately return a phone
message Tuesday.
But Moore pointed to the mayor's 2008 commitment to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions to three-fourths of 1990 levels by 2020.
"To be consistent, he should be in full support of this ordinance," Moore
said. "This ordinance will put Chicago on the map and cement its reputation
as the greenest city in America."
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