|
Archives
EPA Enforcement Cuts Pollution By 1 Billion Pounds
EPA enforcement actions in fiscal year 2005 resulted in legal commitments
by companies, governments and other regulated entities to reduce a projected
1.1
billion pounds of pollution and require that they spend a record $10 billion
to come into compliance with environmental laws. This is an increase of $5
billion over last year. EPA’s criminal enforcement program helped successfully
prosecute some of the largest environmental crimes in history in FY 2005, with
judges imposing significant sentences and large criminal fines. Most annual measures
of the agency’s enforcement and compliance activity surpassed or kept pace
with previous years, indicating continued progress in deterring violations of
the nation’s environmental laws.
“EPA’s enforcement strategy and accomplishments demonstrate our commitment
to achieving cleaner air, cleaner water and healthier communities,” said
Granta Y. Nakayama, EPA’s assistant administrator for Enforcement and Compliance
Assurance. “Our enforcement statistics show significant progress in criminal
enforcement and securing compliance and environmental benefits.”
Among the environmental benefits resulting from agency actions during FY
2005, EPA estimates that 28.2 million cubic yards of contaminated soil and
1.6 billion
cubic yards of contaminated water will be cleaned up; 1,900 acres of wetlands
will be protected; and the drinking water of more than 8 million Americans
be safer. Criminal defendants will pay $100 million in criminal fines and restitution
and serve more than 186 years in jail. Our 10 biggest air pollution cases will
reduce more than 620 million pounds of pollutants annually and that will produce
annual human health benefits valued at more than $4.6 billion. The benefits
include
reductions in premature mortality, bronchitis, hospitalizations and work days
lost.
Tackling the problems of older municipal water systems that cause overflows
of raw sewage into streets, yards, basements, and bodies of water was an EPA
enforcement
priority again this year. Together with states, EPA has concluded major sewer
cases in FY 2005 to reduce more than 19 billion gallons of raw sewage overflows
since 1998.
Supplemental Environmental Projects, which are environmentally beneficial
projects that a violator voluntarily agrees to perform as part of an enforcement
settlement,
increased by 19 percent to be worth $57 million in FY 2005.
A record number of entities (627) voluntarily disclosed violations to EPA
- a 28 percent increase over FY 2004. The agency achieved a reduction of 1.9
million
pounds of pollutants as a result of audits.
Approximately 612,000 businesses and individuals received assistance from
EPA in FY 2005 to help understand their environmental responsibilities and
comply
with environmental laws.
More information on EPA’s FY 2005 enforcement and compliance program,
including details of significant enforcement and compliance assurance activities
and data
are available at: www.epa.gov/compliance/data/results/annual/fy2005.html.
Archives
|