BOSTON - The E.P.A. and Department of Justice today announced that the owner/operator of the state's Central Landfill in Johnston, Rhode Island will be spending in excess of $5 million on air pollution control measures as part of a settlement of alleged Clean Air Act violations. The settlement, which is subject to a 30-day public review period, was filed today in U.S. District Court in Providence.
Stemming from an E.P.A. investigation that began in the late 1990s, the settlement with the Rhode Island Resource Recovery Corporation (RIRRC) requires payment of a $321,000 penalty and installation of additional pollution control systems that will substantially enhance collection and control of landfill gas at the 190-acre landfill which handles most of the state's household and commercial waste. Noxious odors from the landfill gas have been a long-standing source of complaints among residents living near the landfill.
"This landfill case is further evidence that E.P.A. is fully committed to enforcing new source review and other clean air requirements to the maximum extent possible," said J.P. Suarez, assistant administrator at EPA's Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance. "It is a major victory for Rhode Islanders living in close proximity to this facility."
"This arrangement will result in significant reductions in gas emissions from the Central Landfill," said Robert W. Varney, regional administrator of EPA's New England Office. "Controlling and capturing landfill gas is a complex challenge and these required changes should lead to significant enhancements in air quality."
"Today's settlement represents resolution of one of the 1st enforcement actions in the nation for violations of New Source Review under the Clean Air Act at a solid waste landfill," added Tom Sansonetti, assistant attorney general at the U.S. Justice Department's Environment and Natural Resources Division. "This is further evidence of the government's efforts to protect our environment for America's future generations and to work with industry to reduce the levels of harmful pollutants and noxious odors in our air."
The landfill gas control and other compliance measures RIRRC has already implemented as a result of EPA's enforcement action have significantly decreased the amount of landfill gas being emitted from the landfill. Based on information obtained by E.P.A. from the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, these compliance measures have also reduced the frequency and severity of odors emanating from the landfill. Further improvement is expected in the future based on additional measures RIRRC has committed to undertake as part of this settlement.
The new pollution control systems will result in the capture and control of about 30,350 tons of methane (a global warming pollutant) and 215 tons of volatile organic compounds (a contributor to smog air pollution) between now and 2010. The additional equipment is designed to boost the facility's overall capture/ control efficiency of landfill gas to 90 percent or better. As part of the settlement, RIRRC has already purchased or surrendered 175 tons of emissions credits - allowances to emit smog-causing pollutants - to mitigate excess emissions that resulted from violations found during the E.P.A. investigation.
The settlement requires enhancements at numerous areas of the Central Landfill, which consists of 4 landfill phases. Phase I of the Central Landfill opened in 1955 under previous ownership and was closed in 1993. (This area is being cleaned up under EPA's Superfund Program.) Phases II and III began accepting waste in the 1990s and Phase IV began accepting waste in September 2000.
Among the specific enhancements required under the settlement:
- installation of 14 horizontal landfill gas collection trenches in the upper altitudes of Phases II and III (this work was completed in fall 2001);
- continuation of the ongoing installation of an extensive landfill gas collection trench system in all altitudes of Phase IV;
- installation, over the next 4 years, of cover and capping materials on Phases II and III to trap escaping landfill gas, limit water infiltration into the waste, and increase the efficiency of already existing collection and control systems. (This work schedule is far more aggressive than what would be required under state law.)
- installation, within the next year, of an ultra-low emissions flare which will burn landfill gas substantially cleaner than most flares currently on the market.
The cost of implementing these control measures is estimated at more that $5 million.
E.P.A. launched its investigation in July 1999. In 2000, E.P.A. issued 2 administrative orders and one notice of violation to RIRRC for: failure to obtain pre-construction permits and install appropriate controls for Phases II, III, and IV as required by the New Source Review requirements in the Rhode Island Air Pollution Control Regulation; failure to conduct certain monitoring, testing, and record keeping required by the federal New Source Performance Requirements for Municipal Solid Waste Landfills which are designed to minimize landfill gas emissions; and failure to apply for and obtain a required facility-wide Title V operating permit