Two environmental groups agreed to drop a lawsuit against the Biden administration Thursday after it acceded to their demands regarding a key Indiana refinery’s permit.
The Environmental Integrity Project and Sierra Club voluntarily dismissed their lawsuit against the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and said the issue “has now been fully resolved” in a filing with the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. [bold, links added]
The EPA ultimately agreed to the groups’ demands in March, issuing an order granting part of their petition objecting to how particular equipment at BP’s Whiting petroleum refinery in northwest Indiana is regulated.
“Based on a review of the Petition and other relevant materials, including the Permit, the permit record, and relevant statutory and regulatory authorities … the EPA grants in part and denies in part the Petition requesting that the EPA Administrator object to the Permit,” the agency said in the order issued March 4.
The EPA further ordered the Indiana Department of Environmental Management to revise its permit for the refinery.
The state agency must monitor certain refinery equipment to account for particulate matter emissions and revise the Whiting refinery’s permit to guarantee a consistent heat input, the EPA ordered in accordance with the two groups’ petition, Bloomberg Law reported.
The two green groups issued the petition in July 2021 and filed the lawsuit in November after the EPA failed to respond, arguing the agency’s head Michael Regan had failed to abide by the Clean Air Act when he chose not to object to the refinery’s permit.
“The Administrator’s delay in granting or denying Plaintiffs’ Petition thus directly harms Plaintiffs and frustrates their ability to ensure Whiting refinery’s compliance with the requirements of the Clean Air Act,” the organizations said in a Nov. 23 filing.
Meanwhile, the Biden administration has reportedly considered reopening idle refineries nationwide amid the global energy crisis and nationwide fuel supply shortfall.
The U.S. hasn’t constructed a major refinery in decades due to expected fuel demand decline in coming years and burdensome environmental regulations, experts previously told The Daily Caller News Foundation.
Refineries with a total capacity of 800,000 barrels a day have closed since 2019, leaving the U.S. with a total operating refinery capacity of 17.7 million barrels a day, its lowest level since 2013.
Read more at Daily Caller
Here in Australia, we are down to two refineries both now receiving financial assistance to remain viable. Who would have thought a petroleum refinery would ever need government assistance to remain open? This is what western countries have allowed to happen. Green activists now control energy production and supply. Who is going to stop this madness?
There was a Bump Sticker reading SIERRA CLUB KISS MY AXE
Unless these environmental NGO’s “litigation bonanza” (somehow) gets reigned in, it will be almost impossible to permit any new refineries or major expansion projects. Same goes for pipelines & ANY other infrastructure projects these environmental activists deem inappropriate…