Release date: 06/10/04
Contact Information: Contact: Peyton Fleming, EPA Press Office (617-918-1008)
For Immediate Release: June 10, 2004 Release # 04-06-10
BOSTON - The US Environmental Protection Agency's New England Office and the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection today announced a proposed draft water discharge permit for the Mirant Kendall Station power plant that will limit the Cambridge facility's environmental impacts on the Lower Charles River. The 283-megawatt facility is the largest industrial discharger on the Charles River.
The jointly issued draft permit, subject to a 45-day public comment period, focuses primarily on the potential environmental impacts from the power plant's once-through cooling system, which requires water withdrawals from the Charles River and heated discharges back into the river.
The draft permit requires seasonal barrier nets or other devices to limit the number of fish that are trapped or pulled into the power plant when cooling water is pumped into the facility. It also requires new continuous water quality monitoring, including temperature readings, that will evaluate the ecological health of the Lower Charles River Basin, including potential impacts the facility may be having on the lower basin. It also includes new limits on heated-water discharges when water temperatures in the river's lower basin become excessively warm, thereby jeopardizing the ecological health of the river, including native and migratory fish populations.
"This draft permit is an important component of continuing public and private efforts to restore the health of the Lower Charles River and Boston Harbor," said Robert W. Varney, regional administrator of EPA's New England Office. "With sound science as its foundation, this draft permit provides an appropriate balance between the power plant's operational needs and protecting the Charles River ecosystem, one of New England's most valuable natural resources."
In 1995, EPA's New England Office launched an ambitious effort to restore the river so that it is safe for fishing and swimming by 2005. The partnership, known as Clean Charles 2005, includes federal, state and local agencies, nonprofit organizations, businesses and various other groups.
"The Lower Charles is an active ecosystem that currently struggles to support dozens of species of aquatic life," said DEP Commissioner Robert W. Golledge Jr. "This draft permit requires the use of an innovative, real-time water quality monitoring system that, once installed, will provide immediate protection within this critical waterbody."
Last year, the Kendall power plant completed a major facility upgrade, including the installation of a new natural gas fired generator and an increase in its electrical generating capacity from 113 megawatts to 283 megawatts. The upgrades make it possible for the power plant to shift from providing electricity only during peak electrical demand to a base-load power plant which operates nearly year-round.
While the conversion from oil to gas for powering the plant provides a benefit to air quality, the facility can have major impacts on the river's water quality. The Kendall station uses a once-through cooling system that withdraws an average of 70 million gallons a day from the Charles River and discharges it back into the river at temperatures up to 20 degrees Fahrenheit warmer, or as hot as 105 degrees Fahrenheit. The plant's current water usage is up to five times greater than the flow of the Charles River during low flow periods.
In developing the draft permit, EPA and DEP paid especially close attention to the facility's potential impacts on fish populations in the river -- in particular, resident fish such as yellow perch and migrating fish such as river herring. Two species of river herring, alewife and blueback herring, use the Lower Charles River Basin for their annual adult migration and spawning and development of larvae herring to juveniles and then adults from May to October each year. If river water is too hot during this time of year, fish will avoid heated portions of the river or may succumb altogether.
EPA and DEP also paid close attention to the facility's potential to cause or exacerbate eutrophication, a process in which excessively warm nutrient-rich water can cause excessive growth of algae which, in turn, can lead to oxygen depletion and aesthetic impacts such an increased green and brown color in the water.
To address these various environmental issues, the draft permit includes the following requirements and conditions:
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