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MPR’s Stephanie Hemphill reports that Minnesota, and other states, are mobilizing to clean up the air in supposedly pristine areas like the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness and Voyageurs National Park.

Segement includes interviews with various parties involved in what’s going to be a long process.

Transcripts

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STEPHANIE HEMPHILL: What, you didn't know that Boundary Waters had dirty air? Here's one way of thinking about it. On the clearest days in the Boundary Waters, you can see 120 miles. But on 1/5 of the days in any given year, you can only see 33 miles. That's haze getting in the way.

CATHERINE NEUSCHLER: Haze is caused by a fine particulate. It's the same particulate matter that is implicated in asthma, and when we have a high air quality index day.

STEPHANIE HEMPHILL: Catherine Neuschler is in charge of the haze cleanup effort at the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.

CATHERINE NEUSCHLER: Most of what's implicated in the haze problem just comes from the mixing of different pollutants in the atmosphere to form this fine particulate matter, which can travel long distances. So it really is a regional problem, a US wide problem.

STEPHANIE HEMPHILL: Congress has ordered states to clean up the air in national parks and wilderness areas. The pollution that causes the haze in the northern wilderness comes from all over, from the Twin cities, even from as far away as Illinois and Missouri. In fact, more than 2/3 of the pollution causing bad days up North comes from outside Minnesota on winds from the South. It's mostly sulfur dioxide, SO2, and nitrogen oxides.

The SO2 comes mostly from burning coal. The nitrogen can be from industry or from the exhaust pipe of your car. About half of Minnesota's share of this troublesome mix comes from the state as a whole. The other half comes from the six counties closest to the parks. In that nearby area, coal fired power plants contribute half. Nearly half is from taconite plants, and a tiny amount is from paper mills and other sources.

Electric companies are busy installing scrubbers, and fabric filters, and improving combustion techniques. A lot of that work was already underway when the haze issue came up. But taconite companies are another story. There's no off-the-shelf control technology for taconite furnaces like there is for power plants. Craig Pagel directs the Iron Mining Association of Minnesota.

CRAIG PAGEL: What you're doing is hoping that you're going to develop something that will work. And, as hard as we try to develop technology, there isn't always breakthroughs.

STEPHANIE HEMPHILL: The MPCA plans to require the taconite companies to implement good combustion practices. That means adjusting their pellet furnaces to reduce pollution. And they'll have to install monitors that measure emissions continuously. After those are in place for a year, the agency will set a limit on emissions, based on those good combustion practices. All this work is getting pushed back because so many of the taconite plants have been shut down because of the poor economy.

The MPCA is also including planned new sources of pollution like SR steel, Mesabi nugget, and proposed copper nickel mines. Meanwhile, the other states that contribute to haze in Minnesota's national parks are working on reducing their pollution, and Minnesota needs to reduce its contribution to haze in Isle Royale National Park over in Michigan. It's a complicated and long-term project. And for a pollution control effort, it's been unusually collaborative.

The US Forest Service and the National Park Service have been closely involved. As the MPCA developed its plan, so have the power companies, and taconite plants, and environmental groups, like the Voyageurs National Park Association, are weighing in. Cory MacNulty, the director of the association, says the plan would be stronger, if the MPCA would require the taconite plants to test new pollution control technologies.

CORY MACNULTY: I think it's more difficult for them because they can get pushback from the industry and from politicians. But I think they have the ability to do that if they choose. And the regional haze state implementation plan is a good way for them to take a look at the taconite industry and try to push for some of these technologies to be tested.

STEPHANIE HEMPHILL: She says the cleaner, the air is up north, the cleaner it will be where more people live. The MPCA hopes to have its plan ready for approval by the Federal Environmental Protection Agency by the end of this year. Stephanie Hemphill, Minnesota Public Radio News.

Funders

Digitization made possible by the State of Minnesota Legacy Amendment’s Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund, approved by voters in 2008.

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