EPA to Set Chesapeake Bay Pollution Caps

Nov. 24, 2008
Bay-wide TMDL to be completed in December 2010

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Stephen L. Johnson recently renewed EPA’s commitment to speed Chesapeake Bay restoration efforts with its partners, while agency officials outlined plans for an unprecedented effort to set pollution caps needed to meet water quality standards throughout the Bay’s watershed.

“Working together we can turn the tide on a cleaner, healthier Bay,” Johnson said. “It will take the federal government and our partners to solve the challenges of the Chesapeake Bay.”

Johnson said that leadership in the development of a Bay-wide pollution cap, known as a Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL), will be among EPA’s significant contributions. The novel process for creating the TMDL—the largest of its kind—was outlined by EPA officials at a recent Chesapeake Executive Council meeting at Washington, D.C.’s Union Station.

The Bay-wide TMDL is scheduled to be completed in December 2010 and will identify pollutant caps by major river basin in the 64,000-sq-mile Bay watershed.

The TMDL will allocate “loadings” of nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment to all jurisdictions in the watershed, including New York, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia.

“This is a major undertaking that will involve substantial public input and close coordination with the states,” said Jon Capacasa, director of the Water Protection Division in EPA’s Region 3, the lead agency for the TMDL development. “This process will help states implement strategies for accelerated restoration activities.”

EPA Region 3 will work closely with modeling and water quality experts at the Chesapeake Bay Program in developing the TMDL and will engage the states in the process through the Bay Program’s committee structure.

EPA also will work with state agencies as they develop accompanying implementation plans that identify specific actions needed to satisfy the caps. The states will provide commitments every two years for the necessary actions.

More information on the TMDL process is available at www.epa.gov/owow/tmdl/.

Source: EPA

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