This factsheet published as part of the EPA's rules for Municipal Solid Waste Landfills focuses on
proposed emission guidelines for existing landfills...
Not exact matches
The California Air Resources Board could soon
propose guidelines to generate offsets from reducing methane
emissions in rice fields (ClimateWire, Aug. 20).
S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, Regulatory Impact Analysis for the
Proposed Carbon Pollution
Guidelines for Existing Power Plants and
Emissions Standards for Modified and Reconstructed Power Plants, EPA - 452 / R -14-002 (June, 2014), accessed December 30, 2014.
We are environmental and energy regulators from a group of 12 states, and we are providing comment on the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Advance Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking on State
Guidelines for Greenhouse Gas
Emissions from Existing Sources (ANPRM)[1].
First, there's EPA's effort to regulate power sector
emissions — with carbon pollution
guidelines proposed for existing power plants, on top of the already
proposed guidelines for new electric utility generating units.
With the
proposed IPCC
guidelines, tropical countries that rely heavily on hydroelectricity, such as Brazil, could see their national greenhouse
emissions inventories increased by as much as 7 % (see map).
The CPP is a
proposed EPA regulation that would establish carbon dioxide (CO2)
emission reduction
guidelines for existing fossil fuel - fired electric generating units.
Last year, the Environmental Protection Act (EPA) issued
proposed guidelines, known as the Clean Power Plan (CPP), directing all states to limit carbon dioxide
emissions from power generation, purportedly in accordance with Section 111 (d) of the federal Clean Air Act.