A coalition of outdoor industry business leaders, clean air and park advocates, and winter sports athletes have delivered a petition with more than 30,000 signatures to Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Region 8 Administrator Shaun McGrath urging the EPA to compel strong and fair limits on coal pollution impacting Utah’s national parks and communities.

The EPA must decide on the State of Utah’s proposal, which would allow unabated air pollution from Rocky Mountain Power’s Hunter and Huntington coal-fired power plants instead of requiring industry-standard pollution controls.

The signatures have been gathered since December 2014 and represent states and communities across the country.

“Utah's stunning national parks are part of our state's heritage, our way of life, and a vital part of our economy,” said Black Diamond Inc. Founder and CEO Peter Metcalf. “They're why so many choose to settle here, to raise families here, to grow old here,” Metcalf says.  “Utahns deserve the same protections from damaging coal pollution that other states afford to their residents. Protecting our national parks is about protecting our economy and the communities that depend on them.”

In 2014, more than 10 million visitors from around the world visited Utah’s national parks and added $730 million dollars to Utah’s economy. The tourism industry supports about 132,000 jobs, or about one out of every ten jobs in the state.

As reported earlier this month, the coalition urged the EPA to protect national parks in Utah and across the West from haze-causing coal pollution.

“The proposal sent by the state of Utah to EPA does absolutely nothing to cut the nitrogen-oxide pollution from the Hunter and Huntington coal plants,” said Cory MacNulty, Senior Program Manager for the National Parks Conservation Association. “This pollution obscures up to 30 miles of the spectacular scenic landscapes that should be visible through Delicate Arch and from the Island in the Sky viewpoint in Canyonlands National Park.”
Under the Clean Air Act’s “Regional Haze Rule”, federal and state agencies are required to work together to improve visibility at all “Class I” national parks and wilderness areas, including Utah’s National Parks. Utah is one of the last states in the country to address emissions from power plants that pollute skies and shroud the views at national parks.

The Hunter and Huntington plants are responsible for 40 percent of all nitrogen oxide emissions from Utah's electric sector, according to a recently released report. Monitoring studies have also shown visibility at Arches and Canyonlands National Parks is diminished by human-caused haze 83 percent of the time relative to the annual average level of natural haze.

In addition, pollution mapping has demonstrated the haze-causing emissions from Rocky Mountain Power’s Hunter and Huntington coal-fired power plants reaches beyond Utah’s borders, threatening air quality in national parks as far north as Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming, as far south as the Grand Canyon, and east to Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado.