June 19, 2025
(Targeted News Service)
–
* * *
Court Rules
EPA
Failed to Properly Consider, Update Water Pollution Standards For
Oil Refineries
, Plastics Plants
*
SAN FRANCISCO
-- The
9th Circuit Court of Appeals
ruled today that the
Environmental Protection Agency
acted unlawfully in declining to update water pollution control standards for seven major industries. The industries include petroleum refineries, inorganic and organic chemical manufacturers, and factories that manufacture plastics, fertilizer, pesticides and nonferrous metals.
The court agreed with conservation groups that the Clean Water Act requires the
EPA
to consider technological advancements in controlling water pollution when the agency updates its pollution reduction standards, known as effluent limitation guidelines.
"
EPA
has ignored the Clean Water Act for decades and allowed the petrochemical industry to dump its dirty wastewater into our public waterways without modern pollution controls," said
Jen Duggan
, executive director at the
Environmental Integrity Project
. "But this decision makes clear that
EPA
must act to limit the toxic stew of pollutants released by refineries and the plants that make chemicals and plastics, and protect downstream communities and the health of our rivers, streams and lakes."
The
EPA
has not updated 80% of the 59 categories of water-pollution technology standards in more than 30 years. These outdated standards mean more water pollution is being released into
U.S.
waters than allowed under the law despite the availability of modern pollution control technology.
"This is a significant victory for clean water, public health and aquatic wildlife, but it is also a beacon of hope amid the Trump administration's efforts to dismantle our key environmental protections," said
Hannah Connor
, a senior attorney at the
Center for Biological Diversity
"The
EPA
must now take action to ratchet down dangerous mercury, chloride and plastics pollution instead of giving a free pass to polluters. It's ludicrous that so many polluters are using pollution control technologies from the Reagan era before personal computers and email existed."
The court additionally determined that the
EPA
acted arbitrarily when it failed to consider the role that stormwater runoff plays in pollution from the plastics industry. The ruling also found that the existing standards for reducing plastic pollution are significantly less strict than the scientific information demonstrated they could be.
As the plastics industry has continued to ramp up plastic pollution in this country, an estimated 8 million tons of plastic enters our oceans every year, and it's expected to outweigh all the fish in the sea by 2050
The
EPA
's failure to update these limits has real-world consequences for downstream communities and the environment. A recent analysis by the
Environmental Integrity Project
found that plastics manufacturers, for example, release pollutants that are completely unregulated by the
EPA
, including contaminants that scientists have identified as carcinogenic or otherwise harmful to human health.
These pollutants include dioxins, which are known cancer-causing agents that are highly toxic and persist in the environment, and 1,4-dioxane, a likely carcinogen that
EPA
scientists recently indicated is threatening drinking water sources. Nitrogen and phosphorus pollution discharged from plastics and petrochemical plants -- which cause algal blooms and fish-killing low-oxygen zones -- are also not currently controlled by the
EPA
's water pollution control standards.
The lawsuit was filed by the
Environmental Integrity Project
, the
Center for Biological Diversity
, Clean Water Action,
Waterkeeper Alliance
,
Food & Water Watch
, Environment America, Bayou City Waterkeeper, Black Warrior Riverkeeper, Healthy Gulf, San Antonio Bay Estuarine Waterkeeper, San Francisco Baykeeper, the
Surfrider Foundation
and Tennessee Riverkeeper.
The conservation groups were represented by in-house counsel with the
Environmental Integrity Project
and
Center for Biological Diversity
.
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Original text here: https://biologicaldiversity.org/w/news/press-releases/court-rules-epa-failed-to-properly-consider-update-water-pollution-standards-for-oil-refineries-plastics-plants-2025-06-18/
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