EPA Proposes Tougher SO2 Air Quality Standards

Law360, New York (November 18, 2009, 4:10 PM ET) -- The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has proposed a new, stricter air quality standard for sulfur dioxide, marking the first time in almost four decades the regulator has sought to tighten standards on emissions of the pollutant.

The agency announced the higher national one-hour standard — between 50 and 100 parts per billion — along with strengthened monitoring and reporting requirements for the emissions on Tuesday.

The goal for the new standard is to protect people from short-term exposure from five minutes to 24 hours, the EPA...
To view the full article, take a free trial now.

Already a subscriber? Click here to login

You must correct or enter the following before you can submit this form:

All fields required

  1. Required

Only Law360 gives you:

Non-stop coverage of high-stakes litigation across 30 practices

Real-time tracking and reports on 10,000+ companies, firms and industries

Over 80,000 attorney profiles with neutral data collected from active lawsuits

Research tools to find cases, court documents, attorneys and companies

Customized feeds and alerts that can easily be shared with colleagues

In-depth expert analysis from high-profile attorneys at top firms

Access to our vault with over 75,000 original articles