
The United States Environmental Protection Agency announced the plans on June 30 to review the federal wastewater download limits for Steam-Electric electric power plants, a regulatory change that will be expected to alter the deadlines and costs for the upcoming retrofit projects.
The current effluent limitation guidelines (ELG), completed in May 2024 under the Biden Administration, impose almost null discharge requirements on four categories of wastewater on coal and gas plants: waste water disulfurization water water water, lower ashtime transport water, in the combustion of non -managed combustion and parts of the non -managed parts.
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Compliance requires the installation of advanced treatment systems designed to eliminate pollutants’ downloads, a measure projected to cost billions of dollars, but would increase opportunities for contractors who design and build wastewater treatment systems in the electricity sector. According to the EPA’s regulatory impact analysis, compliance costs throughout the industry could total $ 1 billion, and individual facilities can deal with up to hundreds of $ $ on updating expenses.
In his proposed decision notice, EPA said he would look for data on capital and operation expenses, practical performance and possible alternatives, such as expanded deadlines and flexible technologies.
“We know that there are serious concerns about the deadlines for compliance,” said EPA administrator Lee Zeldin in a statement on June 30. )[We must consider more realistic options that may prevent the burdensome costs required by the current regulation.”
Under the Clean Water Act, EPA is required to review effluent-limitation guidelines periodically to reflect advances in pollution‑control technology and economic considerations.
The agency expects to publish the proposed rule in the Federal Register later this year, open a 60-day comment period and issue a final rule by mid-2026. A second rulemaking could follow to address additional wastewater streams not covered by the update.
Environmental groups warned that any relaxation of the guidelines could lead to increased pollutant loads in rivers and streams. Since the Obama administration, EPA has been issuing more stringent standards to protect water quality, says Thomas Cmar, a senior attorney at Earthjustice.
“Unfortunately, during the first Trump administration, those wastewater standards were rolled back, and during the subsequent four years of the Biden administration, we pushed hard for the EPA to strengthen those standards even further; now the [second] Trump’s administration proposes to reconsider them again, “says CMAR. The result of the hesitation between the regulatory approaches has been” Ping Ping Pong “, he adds.
It is expected that the result of the EPA’s decision directly influences the decisions of projects, deadlines and recruitment of the retrofit market of wastewater related to investment in pipes, treatment systems and updates of the site over the coming years.
Brian Turmail, Vice President of Public Affairs and Labor of the General Associated Contractors of America, said that, while the commercial group has no official position on the updates of the regulation, it supports a “approach everything that is poured” into energy policy. “Recognizing the impact of energy costs on all facets in the supply chain, we support common sense approaches to regulation that maintain affordable energy and do not adversely affect availability.”
