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ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
June 15, 2006
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IN THE MATTER OF
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PROPOSED NEW 35 ILL ADM. CODE) R06-25
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225 CONTROL OF EMISSIONS FROM) (Rulemaking - Air)
LARGE COMBUSTION SOURCES )
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(MERCURY)
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TESTIMONY OF DR. GERALD KEELER
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PART I
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BEFORE MARIE E. TIPSORD
HEARING OFFICER
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The testimony of Dr. Gerald Keeler, a
witness called in the rulemaking proceeding before the
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Illinois Pollution Control Board taken on June 15, 2006,
at 9:00 a.m., at the offices of the Environmental
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Protection Agency, Springfield, Illinois, before Holly
A. Schmid, Notary Public and Certified Shorthand
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Reporter, CSR No. 084-98-254587 for the State of
Illinois.
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A P P E A R A N C E S
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MEMBERS OF THE ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD:
Ms. Marie E. Tipsord, Hearing Officer;
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Dr. G. Tanner Girard, Board Member;
Ms. Andrea S. Moore, Board Member;
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Mr. Thomas Johnson, Board Staff;
Mr. Tim Fox, Board Staff;
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Mr. Nicholas Melas, Board Staff;
Ms. Alisa Liu, Board Staff.
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COUNSEL FOR THE ILLINOIS
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY:
Mr. Charles Matoesian;
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Ms. Gina Roccaforte;
Mr. John Kim;
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Mr. Richard Ayres;
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COUNSEL FROM SCHIFF-HARDEN
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Ms. Kathleen Bassi;
Mr. Stephen Bonebrake;
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Mr. Sheldon Zabel;
Mr. Jim Ingram, Dynegy, Inc.
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For Dynegy Midwest Generation, Inc.
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COUNSEL FROM JENNER & BLOCK
Mr. Bill Forcade;
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For Kinkade;
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COUNSEL FROM McGUIRE-WOODS:
Mr. James Harrington;
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Mr. David Rieser;
Mr. Neal Cabral;
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For Ameren;
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Mr. Keith Harley,
Chicago Legal Clinic
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E X H I B I T S
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IDENTIFICATION
PG.
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MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Good morning,
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everyone. My name is Maria Tipsord, and I'm the hearing
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officer in this proceeding entitled in the Matter of
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Control of emissions from Large Combustion Sources,
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Mercury, Docket No. RO6-25.
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Again, this morning to my left is
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Dr. Tanner Girard. To my right, Andrea Moore, the
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presiding board members in this proceeding. At the far
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right is Nicholas Melas, one of our board members. At
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the far left, is Tom Johnson, also one of our board
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members. Today from our technical unit we have Alisa
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Liu and Tim Fox, Andrea Moore's assistant. Connie
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Newman is in the audience and she is the point person
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for press concerns. Erin Conley is with as today, as is
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Kathy Griffen, and any procedural questions you may
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address to Erin, Tim or I and, I we will try to answer
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them.
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We are I believe starting with
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Dr. Keeler's testimony. He was sworn in when we entered
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his prefiled testimony two days ago. In addition, we
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have already sworn in Jim Ross, Jeffrey Sprague, Marcia
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Willhite and Dr. Hornshaw, and I believe that's all that
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have been sworn, and I would remind them that -- any
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testimony or statements made today will be considered
Page5
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sworn statements. With that, Mr. Kim.
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MR. KIM: Thank you. As you just
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stated, we will be starting with Dr. Keeler today. I
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believe he is going to start with the questions posed to
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him by Ameren Energy, and I think -- I can't remember --
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one or two, or however many questions that were also
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submitted by Prairie State that he will address after
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that.
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CROSS EXAMINATION BY MR. RIESER:
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Q. Before the prefiled questions, I was
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wondering if I could ask some questions just to clear up
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some things from yesterday, just to confirm a couple of
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things. Dr. Keeler, your expertise is as an atmospheric
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scientist. Is that correct?
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A. Yes, it is.
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Q. And so you're an expert in the mechanics
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of mercury deposition from the stack, to the ground, if
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you will?
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A. That, plus a whole lot more, yes.
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Q. But the expertise doesn't include the
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methylation of mercury in the aquatic environment. Is
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that correct?
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A. My formal training does not include the
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biological processing of the chemicals, but I have been
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working in this area for 16 years now, and have been
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part of projects looking at the whole ecosystem cycling
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of mercury, which includes, both, the deposition of
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mercury from the atmosphere, as well as the air surface
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exchange, the photoreduction (phonetic), the chemical
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processing in the aquatic ecosystem, as well as the
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methylation and demethylation processes. Over this time
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period, I have kept up with peered-review literature. I
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have worked with some of the best scientists in the
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field on these things on projects including work in
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Florida work, in the Great Lakes on Lake Superior and
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elsewhere, so I have more than a passing understanding
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of most of the processes involved with mercury and the
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environment.
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Q. But the papers you have prepared yourself
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or that you participated in have dealt, almost entirely,
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with atmospheric deposition. Isn't that correct?
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A. No. That's not correct.
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Q. What's an example of one that's not? I
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have a couple papers where we actually made measurements
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of methylmercury, a paper that we did with the
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University of Wisconsin looking at methylmercury
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deposition and sources of methylmercury. We have a
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couple of other papers that look at vegetation uptake,
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as far as exchange of mercury with enforced ecosystems.
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We have papers looking at volatilization of mercury from
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large bodies of water, such as the Great Lakes, Lake
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Michigan, in particular. I have done work also in Lake
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Champlane in Vermont, and in my vitae, is I believe --
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John, is my vitae part of the record or no?
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MR. KIM: Yes, I believe it is.
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DR. KEELER: So if you look through
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there, you will see that there are papers -- I can't
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tell you how many, but there are papers where we have
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actually published study results that deal with more
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than just atmospheric deposition.
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MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
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Q. With respect to your testimony yesterday,
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with regard to the study in Florida, is it correct that
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your direct involvement in the Florida activities was
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with respect to modeling the deposition of mercury?
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A. Could you be more specific, like my --
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Q. Let me be more specific. The paper that
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you prepared, which was included as Appendix 1 of the --
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what I understand to be the Florida study, which was the
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document that was introduced into evidence yesterday,
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dealt entirely with mercury deposition modeling issues?
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A. That's correct. In terms of the report
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writing responsibility, that was my sole role.
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Q. The modeling of the methylation life cycle
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within the water body, the EMCM model I think it was
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called?
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A. Yes.
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Q. Florida study? That was done Tetricheck
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(phonetic) check. Is that correct?
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A. That sounds correct. Reid Harrison, Curt
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Pullman were the people -- and they have switched
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companies and alliances and other things, so I don't
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know exactly if -- but I think Tetricheck was the
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company they were working for at the time.
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Q. So would it be correct that the analysis
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in the methylation and the biologic uptake in the
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Florida work was done by Tetricheck?
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A. Yes, and Florida DDE (phonetic) has some
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involvement, as well, but yes, that's correct.
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Q. Do you know whether the EMCM model was
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designed for the Everglades?
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A. You know, the EMCM model was not designed
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for the Everglades. One of the things -- and I'm glad
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you brought this up -- is that models can be designed
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for a specific water body or air shed or specific
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application. The mercury cycling model was developed,
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initially, as I understand it, for sea fish lakes in
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Wisconsin, specific type of lake, and the model, though,
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has the physics and chemistry of mercury and
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interactions with BIODA (phonetic) that allow it to
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simulate what happens in the real environment, and it
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takes into account the processes that govern the
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behavior of mercury. As such, in the model, it can be
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adapted to another body of water so an extensive amount
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of work was done by Tetricheck taking the extensive data
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that was put together by the U.S. EPA, Region 4, State
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of Florida, the South Florida Water Management District
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to change the model, so that it would be applicable to
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south Florida and the Florida Everglades, specifically.
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Q. So the model at that particular model that
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was used in the Florida study was, if not originally
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designed, then, certainly, modified to apply solely to
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the Everglades environment. Is that correct, to your
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knowledge?
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A. I think the questions would probably be
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asked to Tetricheck, if you wanted to get to what the
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purpose of their model was. The word "solely" is
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probably not correct.
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Q. Is it also true that there was a
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conclusion of the Florida report that there were no coal
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sources, coal-fired utility sources, that were
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identified in the south Florida area?
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A. Again, are you referring to a specific
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statement that it says in the report?
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Q. Yes, I am.
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A. If you could point that out --
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Q. On the bottom of page 76.
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MADAM HEARING OFFICER: For the
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record, that's Exhibit 20.
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MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
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Q. Thank you. I will point you to the last
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sentence, "Although coal is the largest source (45
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percent) 65 milligrams per year of mercury emissions of
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the U.S. (144 milligrams per year) no coal combustion
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occurs in South Florida and only oil and aquatic related
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emissions occur."
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A. Yes, I see that.
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Q. Do you disagree with that?
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A. In the sense of utility coal combustion,
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that's correct?
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Q. In any other sense is that incorrect?
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A. I believe that they do use coal as a fuel
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source in some of the cement dealings (phonetic).
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Q. Why don't we turn to the questions that I
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submitted, already.
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MR. BONEBRAKE CONTINUES: I also had a
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follow-up from yesterday, and I believe an open issue I
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think that was left open from yesterday. Dr. Keeler, we
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were talking a little bit about yesterday about Table 12
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on the Florida Report, and whether -- which of the data
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points on Table 12 were within the area that were
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affected by the reduction of emissions in South Florida.
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Do you recall that conversation?
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A. Yes, I do, and I made an attempt to
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contact Dr. Atchison at the State of Florida to get a
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copy of a map or something that would help me show where
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the sites were, and I did not receive anything from him
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overnight, so I'm unable to provide any more information
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to you on that.
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Q. There was one statement that I thought was
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relevant, very relevant to this question in the report,
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and I wonder if we could direct your attention to that,
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and I will ask you a follow-up question. It's on page
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81 of the Florida report.
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A. Okay.
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Q. It's the bottom paragraph, and it's the
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sentence that starts, "The three sites" -- it's about
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two-thirds of the way down.
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MR. KIM: Last paragraph.
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DR. KEELER: "Three sites," okay.
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MR. BONEBRAKE CONTINUES:
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Q. It reads, "The three sites in water
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conservation 3-A near Site 3-A dash 15 (located near the
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so-called hot spot of high fish tissue concentrations in
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WCA hyphen 3-A) also showed some cohorts with
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significant declines although nearly as many site-cohort
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combinations also showed no change." Do you see that,
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Dr. Keeler?
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A. I do, yes.
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Q. Site 3A-15 was that the particular
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modeling point that you were referencing yesterday?
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A. It is, yes.
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Q. And does this suggest to you that there
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are, at least, three of the sites reflected on Table 12
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that were in the immediate vicinity of that model site?
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A. Based on what it says here, yes, that's
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correct.
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Q. So those three additional sites would have
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been subject to the same kind of emission reductions
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that affected Site 3A dash 15?
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A. It says they are near Site 3A-15, so that
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would be correct.
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Q. Thank you.
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MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Then I think
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we are ready to begin with Ameren Question No. 1.
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MR. KIM: Actually, I think if we
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could do Dynegy Question No. 1, and before you begin, I
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have some additional copies of what was provided in the
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documents to the TSD, but these are color, and I believe
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the originals were not. Actually, the Board's copies
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were in color, so nobody else has those. I can give you
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those now as an exhibit and then we'll hand these out.
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MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Mr. Kim, just
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for clarification, these are attachments to the TSD?
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MR. KIM: Correct.
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MADAM HEARING OFFICER: This is
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Exhibit B to the TSD.
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MR. KIM: Yes. It's just that the
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copies provided to the Board were in color, but other
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people may not have been able to access them in color.
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MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Just for
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purposes of the report, even though it's already part of
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the record, I think I will go ahead and mark this as
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Exhibit 25, if there's no objection. All right. We'll
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mark this as Exhibit 25.
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(Exhibit No. 25 was admitted.)
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MS. BASSI: I'm sorry. Is this
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Exhibit B to the TSD?
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MADAM HEARING OFFICER: That's my
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understanding.
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MR. KIM: I believe it is, yes.
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MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Just to clear
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up, we are going with Dynegy first, not Ameren?
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MR. KIM: Correct. I misspoke.
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DR. KEELER: Question 1: "Mr. Keeler
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states in his testimony that `Illinois coal-fired power
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plants are the largest source of man-made mercury
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emissions in the State.'" A: How large are these
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emissions compared to natural mercury emission? B: How
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large are these emissions compared to the total amount
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of mercury emitted in Illinois? C: How large are these
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emissions compared to global missions from mercury
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emissions from all sources?" Taking the data that was
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in the TSD, Illinois coal-fired utilities emit about 3
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tons of mercury. To my knowledge, I assume that you are
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asking about natural mercury emissions in the state of
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Illinois. To my knowledge, there is no good emissions
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inventory number for the state of Illinois. However, in
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my best judgment, the natural emissions mercury in the
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state of Illinois would not be very large. We've done
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extensive measurements of mercury emissions from natural
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sources, and Illinois soils, according to the U.S. GS,
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do not have enriched mercury soils. Therefore, the
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probability of natural mercury emissions from natural
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soils in the state would not be very large. Natural
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mercury emissions are thought to be about a third of the
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emissions on a global basis with anthropogenic emissions
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being a third in re-emission from previously deposited
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mercury coming back off the surface being the other
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third, so the 3 tons compared to the global amount of
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mercury that's emitted is a relatively small amount of
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the total. It's less than a percent. What's important,
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though -- and we'll get to this a little bit later on --
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is really not the total amount of emissions, but the
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form of the mercury emissions, and by that, I mean the
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chemical form that's emitted from these sources, and in
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proximity to the sources to the ecosystem, and we'll get
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into this a little bit later on, so the magnitude is not
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really the most important thing to consider here when we
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think about the impacts of mercury sources on the
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environment.
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Question no 2: "What country has the
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largest mercury emissions from coal burning?" Over the
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past few years, there's been a lot of work looking at
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mercury emissions from all the countries in the world.
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At this time, due to the booming economy in China, China
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is thought to have the largest mercury emissions. I
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happened to have been in Beijing last fall at a Mercury
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Emissions from Coal-fired Utilities Workshop, and it was
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amazing how much mercury is emitted into China in the
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nation of China from coal combustion, and their
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projections appear to be that it's going to increase
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over time, so it is a significant amount.
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"Is mercury a global problem."
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MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Question No.
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3.
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DR. KEELER: Question No. 3. Mercury
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is certainly a global problem. I think, over the last
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20 to 30 years, we recognize that mercury contamination
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is an issue everywhere. Of the 50 states, Wyoming I
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believe is the only one that doesn't have fish --
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warning fish consumption advisories and I think that's
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still correct. I believe it's because they haven't
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tested any fish, so this is a problem worldwide, and it
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really is an issue that everyone has to take into
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account and is concerned about. The ubiquitous nature
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of mercury in the environment is what makes it that
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problem.
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MS. BASSI CONTINUES:
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Q. When you say you think Wyoming doesn't
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have any fish advisories because they haven't tested any
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fish, is that based on some examination of some data?
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A. I'm sorry. You linked two of my
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statements together that I didn't actually say. I said
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that Wyoming doesn't have any fish warnings, and then I
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said I don't believe that they have tested any fish. If
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you were to look at the EPA website for fish
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contamination, Wyoming is the only white state. I was
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told that maybe it was because Vice-President Cheney ate
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all the fish too quickly, but I'm not sure if that's
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correct or not. That's hearsay, but in fact, when I
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inquired into that, I was told that they don't have a
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fish testing program.
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Q. Who told you that?
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A. An EPA person at a meeting because I
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presented the table at a meeting that I was at. I
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presented it at a long-range transport conference a few
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years back, and it's pretty glaring when you show a map
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with all the states, except for Wyoming.
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MADAM HEARING OFFICER: For
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clarification, when you say "EPA" do you mean U.S. EPA?
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DR. KEELER: U.S. EPA, yes. To my
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knowledge, based on the EPA, and that's something that's
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available on the U.S. EPA website on the mercury site
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that Wyoming was the only one.
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DR. KEELER: Let's see. Question No.
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4: "Does all the mercury emitted by Illinois coal-fired
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power plants end up in Illinois?" One of the things
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that we were taught very early on in science class is
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that, to use the words "all" or "always" or "everyone"
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or "solely," is usually not good practice. In science,
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there's always an exception to every rule and so my
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answer to that would be no. All the mercury from
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Illinois power plants clearly does not end up in
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Illinois, as does the emissions from any power plant
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does not end up solely in the state that they are
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emitted. I would say that's probably a fair statement.
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MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Mr. Rieser.
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MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
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Q. Do you have a sense -- do you have any
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gauges suggesting what percentage ends up in Illinois?
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A. I do not.
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Q. Do you have any knowledge, based on your
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experience, as to how much ends up in Illinois?
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A. I have not done any state of Illinois
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specific quantification of how much mercury emissions
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from Illinois power plants is deposited in the state.
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The research that I performed has looked at the Great
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Lakes region, and includes all of the Great Lakes
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states, so I can't give you a quantitative number from
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how much comes from the state of Illinois, itself.
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Q. Thank you.
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DR. KEELER: Question No. 5: "Does
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some of the mercury in Illinois water bodies come from
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outside of Illinois?" And A: "How much?" Yes. Some
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of the mercury in Illinois water bodies clearly comes
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from outside the state. Again, I have not done, or I
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have not performed any state-of-Illinois specific
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research. I have looked at the Great Lakes states,
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which, obviously, includes Illinois. In our analysis of
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mercury deposition in the Great Lakes, we assess that
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40-some percent -- I think it was 43 percent -- of the
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mercury deposition that fell within the Great Lakes came
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from within the Great Lakes basin states, and the
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remaining came from outside, so there's a significant
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fraction of mercury that comes from outside of the Great
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Lakes basin, itself. Now, that's the water basin, so
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that's a fairly tight area, so in fact, most of Illinois
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would be included in the out-of-the-basin estimates, so
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our focus was really looking at mercury deposition into
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the Great Lakes, themselves, those actually large bodies
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of water, but that would include, say, the state of
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Michigan, and any other parts of the states that are
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actually in the basin, so mercury definitely is a local
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and a regional and a global transport issue.
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MR. RIESER CONTINUES: This is just a
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clarification. I think you said that most of Illinois
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is not in the Great Lakes basin?
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A. The water basin. That's correct.
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MS. BASSI CONTINUES:
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Q. My question was do you have, or can you
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give us an idea of how much of Illinois is not within
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the Great Lakes water basin? Is there a line? Route
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80?
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A. I think it's probably --
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MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Yes, Ms.
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Willhite, you are sworn in, and are still sworn in, so
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go ahead.
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MS. WILLHITE: Sure. When you
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consider what's in the basin and what's not in the
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basin, it's really what actually drains to Lake
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Michigan, and there's a very small sliver just right
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around the edge of Lake Michigan that actually drains to
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Lake Michigan. That's what's considered in the basin,
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so I would probably say, like, 99 percent of Illinois is
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not considered within the Great Lakes basin.
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DR. KEELER: Question No. 6: "In
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Dr. Keeler's testimony, he mentioned that "source
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contributions from . . . motor vehicle emissions sources
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were important in Detroit." Would it be reasonable to
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suppose they would similarly be important in Illinois?"
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We've done an extensive amount of work looking at runoff
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of atmospherically deposited mercury in the city of
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Detroit to try to understand the source of mercury that
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makes its way to the waste water treatment plant, and as
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part of that study, we actually made runoff measurements
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on highways and streets in the city of Detroit, and from
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areas which do not have traffic, and from that work, we
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were able to hypothesize that motor vehicles actually
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were a source of mercury. After about a decades's worth
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of investigation and hard work, we've actually been able
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to start to quantify that motor vehicles actually do
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contribute to mercury problems, and it's primarily
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through the fuels and the oil that are consumed in the
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motor vehicles and that highway surfaces actually have
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more mercury in the runoff than non-traffic used
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streets, so through this, we did publish a couple of
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papers, and I have made several presentations showing
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that, in fact, motor vehicles do contribute to surface
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runoff of mercury, and it's something that we're just
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finishing a quantitative project looking at that to be
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able to define emissions factors, and to be able to
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better define the total contribution of mercury. At
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this point, the emissions estimates suggest that it's
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going to be some amount less than 10 percent compared to
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the total agriculture inputs, but that number will be
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better defined as we get the final emissions estimates.
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MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Mr. Melas.
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MR. MELAS: Just a quick clarification.
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The emissions from the automobiles, the mercury is the
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same qualitative type -- you mentioned that certain
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emissions vary in chemical nature. Would the emissions
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from the automobile type of mercury have the same
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chemical nature as the kind from coal-fired generators?
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DR. KEELER: Thank you for asking that
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question. That's actually the most important question,
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and I should have said that in my statement. Actually,
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the forms of mercury -- we tried to look at the
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speciation of mercury, so we made measurements of the
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elemental form, reactive gaseous form, which is the form
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that we think is important, in terms of going into the
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ecosystem, and then being the potential form of mercury
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that methylates in the ecosystem, and so elemental,
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reactive, and particulate forms. We see a small amount
3
of particulate coming out of the motor vehicles. We see
4
most of the mercury coming out as elemental, and then we
5
do see a small percentage as reactive, as well. So
6
that's an excellent question, and really quite important
7
in terms of its impact on the environment.
8
MS. BASSI CONTINUES:
9
Q. Dr. Keeler, are you -- do you know where
10
the most traffic in Illinois would be located?
11
A. Do you know where the most traffic in
12
Illinois would be locate? I have not looked at the
13
traffic statistics for the state of Illinois. We have
14
done mercury work in the city of Chicago, and I would
15
hypothesize that that would probably be the highest,
16
having been stuck in traffic in Chicago myself.
17
Q. Have you driven in Springfield's rush
18
minute?
19
A. No. I have missed that, but perhaps
20
tomorrow morning.
21
MR. RIESER CONTINUES: Statistically
22
significant rush hours, aren't we?
23
MS. BASSI: Yeah. Thank you.
24
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
Page24
1
Q. In the answer to the question, you
2
mentioned the studies you have done on runoff, but you
3
also did a study that you discuss in your report
4
regarding Detroit in which you identify, and that was,
5
as I recall, an air sampling study?
6
A. I wasn't clear on exactly which study you
7
were referring to in that, just so I'm 100 percent
8
clear. Is that the most recent paper we did?
9
Q. Correct. Lynam-Keeler, 2005, "Source
10
Receptor Relationships for Atmospheric Mercury in Urban
11
Detroit Michigan."
12
A. Yes.
13
Q. And in that, as I understand that paper,
14
you identify -- you were looking at atmospheric mercury
15
and doing the statistics regarding source receptor
16
relationships and I think you identify emissions,
17
automobile emissions as one of the sources of the
18
atmospheric mercury that you identified. Is that
19
correct?
20
A. Yes, that is correct.
21
Q. I think, also, in this study in Chicago,
22
"Atmospheric Mercury in the Lake Michigan Basin
23
Influence of the Chicago/Gary Urban Area," and that's a
24
study by Keeler and Vette?
Page25
1
A. Yes, Vette.
2
Q. One of your sampling locations was at IIT?
3
A. Yes, downtown.
4
Q. Illinois Institute of Technology, and that
5
would be considered a high traffic area?
6
A. Yes.
7
Q. Adjacent to the Dan Ryan Expressway,
8
especially now, and that also identified automobile
9
emissions as a source of atmospheric -- is that correct?
10
A. Yes.
11
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: I just have
12
one question. You referred to two different articles
13
and asking questions, specifically, about them. Could I
14
ask you to submit those for the record.
15
MR. RIESER: I can submit one of them
16
right now and I will submit the other one this
17
afternoon. And these were studies, specifically,
18
referenced in Dr. Keeler's report, which is Appendix B
19
to the TSD.
20
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: The one that's
21
been handed to me is "Atmospheric Mercury in the Lake
22
Michigan Basin Influence of the Chicago/Gary Urban
23
area." We'll mark that as Exhibit 26, if there's no
24
objection. Seeing none, it is marked as Exhibit 26.
Page26
1
MR. RIESER CONTINUES: I don't know if
2
you want to save Exhibit 27 for the Detroit study for
3
the next session?
4
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: We'll reserve
5
that Exhibit 27 for the Detroit study.
6
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
7
Q. Let me ask one more question on the same
8
subject. I believe you mentioned that the estimated --
9
that the amount of mercury associated with automobile
10
emissions was less than 10 percent of the anthropogenic
11
inputs. Is that correct?
12
A. That's less than 10 percent. That's our
13
preliminary estimate based on today's estimated
14
anthropogenic mercury emissions, which I guess I should
15
make a clarifying point. One of the most difficult
16
things for us to try to convey to people that aren't
17
working in the mercury business is that emissions
18
inventories change constantly. Major source category
19
goes down and the emissions categories can change, so
20
when we're talking about emissions, I will try to be
21
careful about what year I'm basing my statements on
22
because, if you look at the `95-`96 database when
23
municipal waste and medical waste incinerators were
24
still emitting, the percentages of each source category
Page27
1
to the total changes. Now municipal waste and medical
2
waste have been controlled, and so now coal-fired
3
utilities look like a larger percentage of the total
4
just because major source category has gone down, so the
5
fractions change, so I'm referring to the -- making a
6
relative statement to the `99 or 2000 emissions
7
inventory, so 10 percent of the emissions from
8
anthropogenic sources we would suggest is coming from
9
motor vehicles.
10
Q. That 10 percent, just to finish that
11
particular question, that 10 percent is of the 33
12
percent of anthropogenic sources that you talked about
13
earlier, the one-third?
14
A. That's correct.
15
Q. And with respect to the change in mercury
16
emissions over time, and I will direct your attention to
17
figure 19, on page 76 of Exhibit 20, which is a graph
18
regarding annual mercury emissions in South Florida in
19
1980 to 2000.
20
A. Could you tell me what page that is?
21
Q. 76 is what I have.
22
A. Figure 19?
23
Q. So figure 19, page 76 of Exhibit 20 shows
24
significant reductions in emissions, annual mercury
Page28
1
emissions, in South Florida merely between 1991 and
2
2000, correct?
3
A. Yes. 1991 on this graph in figure 19
4
shows an emissions estimate of about 3,000 kilograms per
5
year.
6
Q. It reduces to less than 200 kilograms per
7
year by the year 2000?
8
A. About 200, yes.
9
Q. This reflects your testimony that the
10
control of municipal waste incinerators and medical
11
waste incinerators -- and municipal waste combusters in
12
South Florida over that same time period, correct?
13
A. Yes. That's what the graph says, yes.
14
Q. Would you -- is it your understanding that
15
there are similar reductions nationwide of your mercury
16
emissions as a result of those same controls being
17
imposed state by state?
18
A. That's correct.
19
Q. And is it of similar magnitude as that
20
reflected here?
21
A. The percentage reduction was required by
22
the EPA rule on incinerators, and I would say that's
23
probably similar to this.
24
Q. Thank you.
Page29
1
DR. KEELER: Question No. 7: I did
2
not finish the last part of the question. "Would it be
3
reasonable to suppose that they would be similarly
4
important in Illinois?" That's the end of Question 6.
5
That's referring, again, to motor vehicle contributions.
6
Because, as one of the questions alluded to, because of
7
the location of major urban areas in the Chicago region
8
on Lake Michigan, I suspect that the Chicago area, motor
9
vehicle traffic and mercury emissions would have an
10
impact on Lake Michigan and in the downwind areas
11
because of the fact that it's located kind of in the
12
northern quarter of the state. I would say that motor
13
vehicle emissions in the southern part of the state
14
probably would be less of an importance just because of
15
meteorological conditions. The wind just doesn't blow
16
as often from the north as it does from the southwest.
17
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
18
Q. When you say "impact on Lake Michigan," is
19
that impact in terms of the volume of deposition on the
20
lake surface?
21
A. Do you mean the mass of deposition?
22
Q. Yes. Thank you.
23
A. Yes.
24
Q. And do you have any understanding as to
Page30
1
whether the deposition in Lake Michigan results in high
2
levels of methylmercury in fish within lake Michigan?
3
A. I'm not sure if this was covered or not.
4
The Great Lakes, themselves, most of the Great Lakes,
5
themselves, have only limited mercury fish consumption
6
advisories. There are only a few places, Lake Superior
7
and I believe elsewhere. Lake Michigan, the water body,
8
itself because, it is not anoxic. Methylation does not
9
occur in the water body, so that methylation and
10
methylmercury levels in the lake, itself, are not
11
significant.
12
MR. BONEBRAKE CONTINUES:
13
Q. I believe you mentioned that -- if I
14
understood your answer correctly, that winds from the
15
southwest were predominant. Was that across Illinois,
16
Dr. Keeler?
17
A. I think it's across the entire Great
18
Lakes. That's a statement. If you would like more
19
specific -- are you asking me for a specific location
20
what the predominant winds would be?
21
Q. I'm asking, generally, across the state.
22
If I understood correctly, you were saying, generally,
23
in Illinois the predominant wind direction is from the
24
southwest.
Page31
1
A. South, southwest. Of course, that varies
2
as a function of season of year. You know, we certainly
3
get more northwest and north, northerly winds during the
4
colder months.
5
MS. BASSI CONTINUES:
6
Q. In modeling that we have seen performed in
7
the context of nitrogen oxide, NOx, we saw that motor
8
vehicle emissions were not transported long distances.
9
Would that same principle apply to emissions of mercury
10
from motor vehicles or in whatever form the mercury
11
would come out of motor vehicles.
12
A. I think that because the emissions are
13
surface based, tail pipe emissions, as we were saying
14
the NOx comes out of the tailpipe, which is not very
15
high off the ground, I think a significant percentage of
16
the mercury would be more locally disbursed and
17
deposited, although we do see evidence of the gas phase
18
mercury being transported on larger scales.
19
Q. Thank you.
20
CROSS EXAMINATION BY MR. HARLEY:
21
Q. I'm an attorney here on behalf of the
22
Illinois Public Interest Research Group and Environment
23
in Illinois. Good morning. You had just stated that
24
methylmercury levels in Lake Michigan are not
Page32
1
significant. Were you speaking about the waters of Lake
2
Michigan, the sediments of Lake Michigan or both?
3
A. I was referring to just the water.
4
Q. Would you care to comment on mercury
5
levels in the sediments in Lake Michigan?
6
A. I, personally, have had very limited
7
experience looking at methylmercury concentration in the
8
sediments. I know that Ron Rossman, and the people from
9
the University of Wisconsin have done some sediment
10
sampling, and I know that -- I think you can get that
11
from Lake Michigan Mass Balance Study website, but there
12
is a significant amount of mercury in the sediments. I
13
don't recall how much methylmercury is, quantitatively,
14
how much methylmercury is there, but there is mercury in
15
the sediments, and it does vary, according to nearness
16
to shore, and based on the input of the tributaries,
17
various tributaries into the body of water, so there is
18
significant amounts of mercury in the sediments. My
19
comment was only talking about the water, itself.
20
Q. Thank you for clarifying that. One other
21
question that I have. You indicated that motor vehicles
22
were a source of elemental mercury emissions. Is that
23
correct?
24
A. The motor vehicle is a source of all the
Page33
1
forms of mercury, but predominantly, it was elemental.
2
Q. Would you care to comment at this point
3
about the relative water solubility of elemental mercury
4
by comparison to mercury in its gaseous form and its
5
particulate form?
6
A. Sure. We will get into this later, but I
7
think it's probably a good point. As you asked earlier,
8
the key with mercury really is understanding the
9
chemical form of the mercury in the atmosphere or in the
10
environment. Elemental mercury is sparingly soluble,
11
which means if you take mercury from the air as its
12
floating around in this room -- there's mercury here --
13
and put a glass of water out, there's not going to be
14
much mercury that will go into the water, itself, so you
15
could leave your glass of water out for days, and you're
16
not going to get much mercury in that glass of water.
17
If we sprayed reactive mercury into this room and left
18
your glass of water out, you would see a significantly
19
larger fraction of that mercury actually go into the
20
glass of water, so if you take that analogy, and go to
21
large bodies of water or surfaces, reactive mercury
22
likes to go into droplets, so it likes to go into cloud
23
water. It's a very sticky substance. It likes to
24
deposit to the surface, so if it comes out of a stack
Page34
1
and interacts with any type of surface, it's going to
2
want to stick to it much more quickly.
3
Elemental mercury, depending upon the
4
surface type, most of it is just going to keep getting
5
blown away. It's not going to stick. It's not going to
6
go into the water, so if the mercury comes out of a
7
stack or comes out of a tailpipe, or whatever source, in
8
the elemental form, it's going to have less of an impact
9
on the surrounding area, unless it's coming out in
10
extremely high concentrations. There's evidence near
11
fluoroalkali (phonetic) chemical manufacturing
12
facilities that very high concentrations of elemental
13
mercury come out of those plants, and you can see high
14
concentrations of elemental mercury in the surrounding
15
areas, but in most places, the impact of the elemental
16
mercury emissions on the local environment isn't as
17
great, so in the case of incinerators and sources that
18
put out almost all of the mercury in the elemental form,
19
that has a very large local impact. I'm sorry, in the
20
reactive form. I misspoke. So, if the emissions come
21
out in the reactive form, they are going to have a very
22
local impact. When it comes to particulate mercury,
23
which was the other question, if mercury comes out in a
24
particulate form out of motor vehicle because it's so
Page35
1
close to the ground, it, too, will stay fairly close
2
stay in that highway zone and will get run off with
3
precipitation as it gets washed off. The reactive
4
mercury, of course, if it comes out is going to stick
5
really close by, and it, too, will get washed off or
6
volatilized, depending on the conditions, so the motor
7
vehicle emissions, maybe a smaller fraction, will stay
8
in the local vicinity because it's in elemental form
9
than if it was in reactive form. Did I answer your
10
question sufficiently?
11
Q. Yes. One other follow-up question to what
12
you have commented on so far, testified to so far. That
13
is, you said that the relative percentage of mercury
14
entering the environment from anthropogenic sources has
15
changed as emissions from medical waste incinerators and
16
municipal waste combusters have reduced. Do you know
17
why mercury emissions from medical waste incinerators
18
and municipal waste combusters have decreased so
19
substantially over the past few years?
20
A. Well, there was legislation that was
21
passed by the EPA and went into effect I believe in `98.
22
The legislation might have been passed earlier than
23
that, but I think it had -- I think it went in the `98
24
to 2000 time frame where there had to be a 90 percent
Page36
1
reduction I believe the number was from that industrial
2
sector, and so they had to reduce their emissions by 90
3
percent, which from our analysis in Florida, and from
4
work that was done in Massachusetts, and I think, as
5
time goes on, it would come out in other places had a
6
profound impact on the local deposition in those areas,
7
and it appears to be an impact on the ecosystem, as
8
well, and I think the Florida Report bears that out, and
9
I think now the biological monitoring that was done in
10
Massachusetts beared out the fact that things seem to be
11
improving in those areas where the reduction took place.
12
MR. ZABEL CONTINUES:
13
Q. One question in follow-up on the
14
incinerators, Dr. Keeler. Do you know what most of them
15
did to comply?
16
A. It depends upon the type. Most of the
17
medical waste incinerators, in the past, medical waste
18
incinerators -- there were a small number of large
19
incinerators, hospitals in urban areas, like in South
20
Florida would send their waste to one large medical
21
waste incinerator and these facilities are very
22
unsophisticated, surprisingly. I actually went to one
23
of the large ones in South Florida and I was surprised
24
that it was pretty unsophisticated, and the economics of
Page37
1
controlling mercury emissions from that. It seemed like
2
they were burning almost pure mercury, when it came down
3
to it, so the economics suggested that they could not
4
continue to operate, so they actually shut that plant
5
down, and what happened is a lot of smaller plants that
6
emit less mercury, but are able to cap their emissions
7
in a better way. The municipal waste incinerators had
8
to add various control technologies and I'm not -- I
9
don't have at my disposal at this moment exactly what
10
all the different incinerators did, but there were a
11
variety of control technologies that they used to
12
control the mercury emissions from those plants.
13
Q. Did the majority, in terms of volume of
14
the medical waste incinerators, simply shut down?
15
A. I think, initially, that was the response.
16
Many of the medical waste incinerators shut down because
17
people began sending their waste to other solid waste
18
practices, other ways of dealing with medical waste, but
19
the trend now -- for example, I know in South Florida
20
that now there are, like, a dozen medical waste
21
incinerators that have reemerged, but they're smaller
22
units, but better controlled, but they are still putting
23
out mercury, but it's they are meeting the regulations
24
in smaller units.
Page38
1
Q. Are they new units?
2
A. I'm not sure. They are new, in the sense
3
that they are new in terms of new sources that have been
4
permitted to emit, but I couldn't answer that question
5
whether they were existing facilities that retrofitted
6
or not.
7
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Mr. Rieser.
8
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
9
Q. Just to follow-up on something that
10
happened some time ago. In terms of the automobile
11
emissions, I believe your answer was primarily about
12
emissions in the Chicago area, but wouldn't it also be
13
true that the automobile emissions would also be a
14
potential source in the East St. Louis, Metro East area
15
around St. Louis.
16
A. Yes. I'm really I'm glad you asked that
17
question. When we look for evidence of motor vehicle
18
emissions, we really see them in the large urban areas.
19
When we look in a town such as Springfield, we would
20
have a very difficult time seeing any mercury levels
21
that were increased by traffic in this local vicinity.
22
We have a hard time seeing any in the Ann Arbor, area
23
which is a little bigger than Springfield, but we do see
24
it in the larger metropolitan areas, so of course, the
Page39
1
St. Louis, East St. Louis area would be another example
2
of where you would expected to see some influence from
3
traffic, just as you do in the ozone issue downwind of
4
that corridor.
5
MR. BONEBRAKE CONTINUES:
6
Q. In response to a question from Mr. Harley,
7
you mentioned that there was a relationship between
8
mercury levels in sediment in Lake Michigan and in
9
proximity to the shoreline?
10
A. Yes.
11
Q. Can you explain that relationship to us or
12
perhaps describe that relationship to us?
13
A. Describe that relationship?
14
Q. What is the relationship between the
15
proximity to shoreline and mercury concentrations in
16
sediment?
17
A. From my recollection of the presentations
18
that were made at some of the Lake Michigan Mass Balance
19
meetings, there were places where there was higher
20
sediment retention in the southeast corner of Lake
21
Michigan where sediments tend to accumulate there were
22
fairly high concentrations of mercury. In some of the
23
areas where like the Chicago Ship Channel is, and in
24
that area along the shore of Chicago and Gary where all
Page40
1
the heavy industry is located, there were higher
2
concentrations of mercury in the sediments.
3
We, actually, over the past 15 years,
4
we've done an extensive amount of work with vessels
5
going out on the Great Lakes taking measurements of the
6
air out over the water when the plumes came off shore,
7
and that's the work that's written in that paper that
8
you were given, and one of the things we see is very
9
high concentrations of particulate mercury and other
10
forms of mercury when the flow is off from those
11
industrial areas. You can actually see shiny materials
12
in the surface waters. We actually took samples of
13
microlayer, which is the surface layer of the water on
14
Lake Michigan, and you can see the metallic particles
15
floating on the water, and those samples which we then
16
analyzed actually had fairly high concentrations and
17
other metals. Those particles are very large because
18
you can see them, and those are, basically, the ones
19
that got emitted and deposited very rapidly, and those
20
will then go to sediment, so in areas where there's
21
large tributary inputs, as well as areas with high
22
mercury deposition from the atmosphere, which tend to be
23
located near the shoreline of Lake Michigan, you would
24
see higher particulate loads and higher sediment
Page41
1
concentrations. Of course, the sediment patterns are
2
complicated in any large lake because of the patterns of
3
the reed suspension (phonetic), but they still see
4
patterns of high deposition in a southern part of the
5
lake.
6
Q. Are the higher levels of mercury in
7
proximity tributaries of Lake Michigan related in any
8
way to waste water discharges of mercury to those
9
tributaries?
10
A. My role in the Lake Michigan Mass Balance
11
Study was to look at the atmospheric inputs, and the
12
University of Wisconsin was in charge of tributary
13
inputs working with United States Geological Survey, so
14
that was not my role, so I can't testify to what they
15
found. I know that atmospheric inputs were 85 percent
16
of the total inputs to Lake Michigan with tributary
17
inputs being 15, but there was a large fraction of the
18
tributary inputs that they couldn't account for in terms
19
of where the mercury was coming from, so some portion of
20
the tributary inputs, clearly, would come from runoff
21
and other sources like you mentioned.
22
MS. BASSI CONTINUES:
23
Q. I didn't get my notes completed on this.
24
You were talking about measuring the plumes or measuring
Page42
1
plumes over Lake Michigan, and I got distracted by
2
looking down and seeing the metals on the surface. Did
3
you say there were higher particulate loads in those
4
particular measurement forays that you were doing?
5
A. Yeah. They tended to have a higher
6
particulate fraction.
7
Q. And this is the HGP that you're talking
8
about?
9
A. Yes, I am.
10
MR. ZABEL CONTINUES:
11
Q. This is not on Lake Michigan, but
12
something you said made me think of this. You mentioned
13
reed suspension. Is reed suspension of mercury in a
14
water body -- strike that. Is reed suspension of
15
mercury in a water body, mercury in the sediment, a
16
source of accelerated methylation.
17
A. Again, I guess I'm a reductive type of
18
person. You asked a lot of things in that sentence. I
19
guess there's not a simple answer to asking whether
20
there's anything that accelerates. That suggests that
21
the rate increases with time. I think that any time you
22
reed suspend a mercury in a form that's not available
23
for chemical reaction up into the water column, you
24
would provide it to be chemically reactive. I don't
Page43
1
think it's technically correct that it would accelerate,
2
but yes, reed suspension does provide a way to get
3
mercury into the water column.
4
Q. It would make it available for methylation
5
where it might not otherwise be?
6
A. If the form of mercury was such that it
7
was potentially methylated, yes.
8
Q. I guess let me be a little blunt, and say
9
what my thought was while you were mentioning reed
10
suspension made me think of that. You talked about the
11
modeling in Florida before. I'm wondering if the
12
modeling -- my understanding is the Everglades are a
13
relatively shallow body of water. Is that correct?
14
A. I can usually stand in the Everglades up
15
to my neck in water, yes, so it's a fairly shallow
16
place, except for when you fall into the gator pits.
17
Q. Which they must enjoy greatly, but that's
18
a different thing. My concern is does the modeling
19
address the possibility of severe weather, hurricanes in
20
Florida causing reed suspension, and if so, how?
21
A. I don't believe anyone's addressed that,
22
but that's an excellent question, and I think that
23
severe storms play a huge role in causing havoc to the
24
ecosystem in South Florida. Interestingly enough, I
Page44
1
think they tend to clean things out. The problem with
2
the Florida Everglades has been that we have kind of
3
dammed it up, and whenever you put in canals and dam
4
things up, it, basically, filled in the Everglades, so
5
we could put condos down there, so snow birds like us
6
can go down and live in South Florida. The Everglades
7
has been confined to a smaller area so less water is
8
flushing through that system, so anytime you do that
9
type of a thing, you are actually building up and
10
storing up more contaminants in that ecosystem, and the
11
big storms, basically, flush that out, and those have
12
been occurring continuously for a long time. We hear a
13
lot more about the hurricanes, but those have been going
14
on for a long time, so they -- actually, they are a
15
positive, I would say, in terms of the mercury and other
16
contaminant issues in South Florida.
17
Q. Could cause reed suspension?
18
A. I'm sure they do in the flushing.
19
Q. Flushing the mercury into the Florida
20
bays?
21
A. Yeah, and we actually published a paper
22
looking at contaminant levels over time in Florida Bay,
23
and you can nicely see the inputs of the atmospheric
24
over the last 100 years in Florida Bay sediments, so
Page45
1
even though there are these storms that go on that
2
change the pattern of deposition, you can still see
3
those inputs, so the atmospheric signal is still very
4
strong. We can see lead and lead gasoline in the
5
Florida Bay sediments going back for 100 years.
6
DR. KEELER: Question No. 7: "Would
7
Dr. Keeler consider the Steubenville, Ohio Study site to
8
be representative conditions across the country? A:
9
Representative of conditions anywhere in Illinois, and
10
B: If so, where?" Just to back up, Steubenville, Ohio,
11
is a community that's in Eastern Ohio on the Ohio River
12
Valley. Around 1998, `99, the EPA director of the
13
National Exposure Research Laboratory, Gary Foley, asked
14
the question why there was no mercury monitoring being
15
done in the state of Ohio and there was interest by
16
people in the state of Ohio to have a mercury monitoring
17
site. The EPA issued a request for proposals for a
18
competitive bid process where proposals were submitted
19
to the Office of Research and Development in Washington
20
and we submitted a proposal to that call for proposals,
21
and in that call for proposal, they asked that we choose
22
a site that was within 15 kilometers of a large
23
coal-fired utility. Again, that wording is from my
24
recollection, not from the exact language, but they,
Page46
1
basically, wanted us to identify a location in the
2
country that we thought would have a high probability to
3
have an impact from coal-fired utilities. I've been
4
working in the air quality area now for over 20 years. I
5
started doing atmospheric chemistry and measurements in
6
1982, and as part of my thesis work, I did work in
7
Southwestern Pennsylvania looking at the sources of acid
8
rain, so I have been looking at sources of air quality
9
or aerial problems in this part of the country for more
10
than 20 years.
11
As part of my thesis work, we actually
12
went and made measurements in that area and actually
13
went and looked at local sources, went and visited, and
14
went to many of the power stations and zinc smelters and
15
glass welding and manufacturing plants an everything
16
that was in that vicinity.
17
After I got out of graduate school, I
18
went to the Harvard School of Public Health and
19
continued my work where we were doing a health study
20
looking at the health impacts of particulate air
21
pollution on people, mainly, on children and as part of
22
that study, there was a site in the Steubenville area,
23
and previous analysis had shown that this was a location
24
that had clear coal-fired utility impacts, so as part of
Page47
1
our new study to look at mercury, because of the wealth
2
of data that had been going on at this location for the
3
past -- actually, started in the 70's, we felt this was
4
a good location to go back to, so we went to
5
Steubenville, Ohio, and performed a mercury study, and
6
we're going to hear more about this as time goes on.
7
The question is to its representativeness of conditions
8
of across the country. Again, I'm an atmospheric
9
scientist. I've had formal training in meteorology.
10
When we talk about representativeness, we are saying,
11
"Could you take the information garnered at one spot and
12
transfer it to another spot?" And Steubenville, Ohio,
13
is not representative of, really, of any place, other
14
than Steubenville, Ohio, because of the unique nature of
15
its sources and the meteorological conditions that
16
govern the transport of pollutants to and from that
17
area.
18
However, if one wants to look at the
19
representativeness of an area, such as the Great Lakes,
20
then the Steubenville, Ohio, area is I think a fairly
21
good representative site of many locations along the
22
Ohio River Valley. It's more representative of a
23
Midwest industrial area than it is not representative,
24
so is it a perfect one-to-one correlation with everyone
Page48
1
in the country? Of course not. Steubenville, Ohio,
2
conditions are not like Florida conditions, in terms of
3
the weather. Otherwise, we would all go to Steubenville
4
in the wintertime. Having been there in the wintertime,
5
I can tell you you would not want to go to Steubenville
6
in the wintertime. You don't want to be in Steubenville
7
in the summer, either, but it's not representative of
8
most places in the United States, but it is a good
9
representative site of the Midwest area that is
10
dominated by coal burning.
11
"Is it representative of conditions
12
anywhere in Illinois?" Again, the meteorology is
13
probably not all that much different in terms of the
14
predominant winds the amounts of precipitation. I know
15
that, as people here in Illinois say, Illinois is
16
elevation challenged. Most of Michigan is the same way.
17
We don't have much topography. Southern Ohio has a
18
little bit of topography. In the upwind region of
19
Steubenville, Ohio, it's fairly flat, as well, so it's
20
not a mountainess area. There are no topographic
21
differences. Illinois has, of course, the Lake Michigan
22
shoreline. That is a little bit different, but Ohio
23
also has Lake Erie, so there are many more similarities
24
I would say than not, but to say that it's
Page49
1
representative of any point, that's probably not a fair
2
statement. I don't think anyone would try to say that
3
it's a one-to-one correspondence, but it does have a
4
good general I would say representativeness of the
5
midwestern region.
6
Question 8: "In the Steubenville
7
Study, was there any attempt made to relate deposition
8
of inorganic mercury from anthropogenic sources to
9
methylmercury concentrations in fish?" To continue, the
10
Steubenville Study, as we were asked to propose, was a
11
study to look at the atmospheric -- basically, it was
12
asked to quantify the levels of mercury in the
13
environment, as well as the levels of mercury in the
14
deposition, and to quantify the contributions from
15
coal-fired utilities to the levels that we were seeing
16
in the air and in the wet and dry deposition at that
17
spot. It was not part of the scope of the work for us
18
to link the deposition to aquatic impacts or to cycling
19
or to air-water exchange or any of those issues. It was
20
purely an atmospheric deposition study, so that was
21
beyond the scope of our project.
22
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
23
Q. Yeah, I'm sorry for this. I want to go
24
back to the representativeness. How many -- and I had
Page50
1
these questions in mind, and I might as well get them
2
out now. How many coal-fired power plants are located
3
within 50 kilometers of Steubenville?
4
A. Of Steubenville?
5
Q. Yeah.
6
A. I know that's one of our later questions.
7
I don't have a quantitative number, but there's a large
8
number probably within 50 kilometers. There might be
9
15.
10
Q. Do you know what the combined aquatic --
11
if you're organized to answer this later, we can answer
12
it later.
13
A. I have a table that lists -- I actually
14
have a utility provided table that has all the megawatt
15
-- I mean, it's actually the utilities that put that
16
data together as part of the information requested by
17
the EPA, and so I can add those up if you would like me
18
to, but it's a fairly large number.
19
Q. So would it be correct to say that -- I
20
believe you actually said that Steubenville was selected
21
because it was extended in a place where you would see
22
impacts from adjacent coal-fired power plants.
23
A. Yes. EPA, specifically, asked us to
24
identify a location where we could utilize tools, and
Page51
1
again, I will talk about this a little later in some of
2
the other questions, but we have developed tools over
3
the last 20 years that allow us to make measurements in
4
the environment and to work backwards to identify the
5
sources of the pollution that we measure, and these
6
tools -- some people call it environmental forensics.
7
It's kind of like you find clues to what the source of
8
the pollution is, and then you go and work backwards to
9
identify the source. EPA asked us, specifically, to
10
identify places where we could test those tools and
11
investigate the feasibility and accuracy of using these
12
tools in this type of application, specifically, to look
13
at coal-fired utilities, and this was really an obvious
14
outcome of the 1998 Mercury Report to Congress, which
15
identified municipal waste and medical waste
16
incinerators as the largest source of mercury to the
17
environment, with coal-fired utilities being the second
18
largest.
19
Having successfully reduced the
20
emissions from the first category, which is the
21
incinerator category, and seeing -- again, to see some
22
of benefit, they started asking the questions "Well,
23
what is the impact of coal-fired utilities?" because
24
there really was no data out there, and they asked the
Page52
1
question why, and so they, specifically, told us to go
2
to an area where we had a fairly good idea that we would
3
be impacted by coal-burning utilities, so yes, that was
4
the purpose for us going there.
5
Q. So for the purpose of developing that
6
analogy, it would be good to go to a place where you
7
knew you were going to be able to see the impacts that
8
you were going to test?
9
A. Yes, that's correct. We would not go to
10
South Florida to look for coal-fired utility impacts
11
because there aren't any, so --
12
CROSS EXAMINATION BY MR. AYERS:
13
Q. Following up on that question, isn't it
14
useful to go to a place where you have the phenomenon,
15
if you are going to do the science, to try to understand
16
the phenomenon?
17
A. Yes. That's exactly right. If you're
18
asked to study something, in particular. In that case,
19
we were. It was a very specific request and so we used
20
our, again, 15 years worth of experience at a location
21
to tell us that this was the right place to go, and we
22
actually identified a couple of other locations, as
23
well, not too far from here.
24
We could have gone from Steubenville
Page53
1
over into Pennsylvania. We could have gone down to
2
Athens, Ohio. There's a lot of places in the Ohio River
3
Valley corridor that would have met EPA's requirements,
4
in terms of being within 15 kilometers.
5
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Could you
6
identify yourself for the record.
7
MR. AYERS: I'm Richard Ayres, Ayres
8
Law Group in Washington D.C.
9
MR. AYERS CONTINUES:
10
Q. The second question I guess isn't it true,
11
then, that what you learned in the study, like the one
12
at Steubenville may be transferable in terms of
13
understanding the phenomenon, even if Steubenville is
14
not exactly like another place?
15
A. Yeah. That's a great question. The
16
methods that have been developed -- I should say right
17
up front that what we call these methods are receptor
18
methods. In other words, a receptor is the place that
19
receives the pollution, and so we'll get into this a
20
little later in other questions, but instead of using a
21
model, which takes the emission from a stack, and then
22
models where those pollution emissions go and then fall
23
down to the earth, the receptor methods make
24
measurements at the place, so they are real
Page54
1
measurements, and then we work backwards to figure out
2
where they came from. And these methods have been under
3
development for the past 25 years at the U.S. EPA, and
4
independent of the work that we've been doing, EPA has
5
been working with some of the best scientists in the
6
field to develop a series of models, and to go through
7
and extensive testing and evaluation of these models to
8
look at their use and regulatory applications and
9
there's a whole literature that is out there with tens
10
of papers, 10, 20, maybe up to 100 papers where other
11
people have used these methods to do exactly what we
12
were doing, which is proportion the amount of pollution
13
that came from a particular source type, to how much was
14
received at a specific location, so that work has been
15
going on for a long time and parallel.
16
Our work was not to work on that, to
17
show that these methods work. EPA has an exhaustive
18
report of that. These methods have been tested. EPA
19
has developed these methods. They are publicly
20
available. They have had workshops where they have
21
looked at uncertainties, and both, in the methods and
22
calculations and all that is very well documented. It's
23
not something we did as part of our study. We just took
24
and used those developed tools that EPA had, and used
Page55
1
those to understand what we found in Steubenville, so
2
choosing a place like Steubenville was just a way so
3
that we could look, specifically, at coal-fired
4
utilities to see what are the complexities and
5
difficulties in looking at this type of impact because
6
it is not simple. With everything in science, we start
7
at the beginning, and we work up, and as we learn, we
8
improve what we're doing, and so when this study was
9
proposed, they said, "Okay, go where you think you have
10
the highest probability of findings an answer," so we
11
went there, got a good signal, and we've been successful
12
in working backwards to define the contributions from
13
the sources in that area.
14
Q. One final question, you did this work near
15
the location of a lot of power plants. If, as some have
16
said, that most of the emissions of mercury went up, and
17
far away, rather than being deposited in relatively
18
local areas, would you have seen the signature of the
19
power plants that were located in the relatively local
20
area of Steubenville?
21
A. Again, I guess this answer is a question
22
that is posed to me later on, but again, getting back to
23
the form of the mercury, there are a number of issues or
24
controversies out there, in terms of mercury transport
Page56
1
and deposition. The form of mercury really determines
2
the distance that mercury is going to get transported,
3
and so understanding the form of mercury that comes out
4
of coal-fired utilities is of great importance. The
5
Electric Power Research Institute working with U.S. EPA
6
and others, have done an excellent job of quantifying
7
the amount of mercury that is consumed by this industry
8
and submitted by this industry, and we do have some
9
information on the form of mercury that comes out of the
10
coal-fired utilities. The data -- again, this is data
11
that is in -- we gave reports suggesting that it's
12
somewhere around 67 percent, plus or minus 15 or 20
13
percent of the mercury that is submitted from coal-fired
14
utilities comes out in that reactive gaseous form,
15
although on any given day, at any given plant, that
16
number can vary depending on the blend of coal and the
17
type of control technologies and so forth.
18
In Steubenville, Ohio, there are
19
enlarge number of coal-fired utilities around the plant,
20
and the mercury that comes out of these stacks, based
21
on, again, on the EPA's database, would suggest there's
22
a significant fraction of the mercury that comes out in
23
the reactive form, and this mercury goes into water
24
that's in the atmosphere and gets precipitated out. We
Page57
1
also believe that this mercury is deposited through dry
2
deposition to the earth's surface in a fairly local way.
3
We do see a clear indication that coal combustions
4
dominates the deposition of mercury to the Steubenville,
5
Ohio, area. This is commensurate with our understanding
6
of the form of mercury that comes out of the power
7
plants.
8
MR. RIESER CONTINUES: Well, that was
9
the whole nut, wasn't it? Obviously, there's a lot of
10
questions on that. I don't know where you want to take
11
them just to keep the record sane in the --
12
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Keeping the
13
record sane -- I've given up hope of that.
14
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
15
Q. Fair enough. On the context we have
16
organized our questions, or we can start on it now.
17
A. I think, if we keep going down, I think
18
you will be able to have a chance to probe at what you
19
would like to probe at.
20
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: I would like
21
to point out that it is already 20 after 10, and we are
22
going to be taking a break at 10:30. Why don't we try
23
to get through Ameren's questions before 10:30 and we
24
will take -- I'm sorry -- Dynegy.
Page58
1
MR. RIESER: That's fine. I just want
2
the record to reflect that not asking question here
3
doesn't mean we don't get questions on this later.
4
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Absolutely.
5
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
6
Q. I do want to ask a question on Mr. Ayres'
7
second question, which had to do with how this operates.
8
When you look at testing and experimenting with respect
9
to phenomenon and the place you expect the phenomenon to
10
be, isn't the next step of that to develop some method
11
for extrapolating that determination to other
12
circumstances?
13
A. Yeah. I think we always, again, in kind
14
of a reductionist way of thinking about things, you try
15
to identify an approach and methodology that allows you
16
to answer a specific question, and then the next step is
17
to try to broaden that specific answer to a larger
18
context, and we've been doing similar type of work in
19
the state of Michigan, as well. It hasn't just been in
20
the state of Ohio, so we have similar monitoring sites
21
at multiple locations in Michigan, which I believe, in
22
my testimony, I alluded to, and so we were trying to do
23
that. We have been working very hard, and since one of
24
the things that -- you feel, after awhile, that maybe
Page59
1
your head has gotten softened up because I've been
2
banging it up against the wall so long, but we've tried
3
very hard to get both the states and the agencies to
4
expand the type of work we have done to a larger
5
geographical area, so we could answer these questions,
6
and to do that, to take the science from a spot and take
7
it and broaden it, so we can answer these questions in a
8
more scientific, definitive way.
9
Like everything, the mercury field is
10
fairly new. It's young relative to the acid rain field.
11
We've only been at it for 15 or 20 years, and so it's
12
something that's evolving, but we've made major progress
13
because we learned so much from the acid rain research
14
that was done, and we've learned so much from the acid
15
rain research that the growth period has gone so much
16
quicker, but we would still like to expand, so yes.
17
Q. Listening to that answer, can I say that
18
you are working on methodologies to extrapolate from
19
your findings of Steubenville, but have not yet
20
completed that work?
21
A. Well, as my major advisor told me when
22
started in on mercury, and after a decade, I told him I
23
felt like I had just been on to learn the topic. He
24
said to me, "You're going to retire working on mercury."
Page60
1
I have a long time to retire, a good another 20 some
2
years to, work and I believe this is something that --
3
mercury is an interesting component. It's very
4
difficult to get a handle on in many ways, and so I
5
think, in terms of the changing local, versus regional,
6
versus global concerns, that's changing all the time,
7
and so I think it's something that's going to take a
8
long time. However, as a scientist, I feel like I have
9
a fairly good handle on things that are important for
10
today, and yes, extrapolating -- I wish I had 25 sites.
11
There's no doubt about it, but the sciences, basic
12
chemistry and physics and basic meteorology, and those
13
things are always transferable. The reason that we do
14
work in Florida and Michigan is not because I'm a smart
15
guy, and I want to go to Florida for vacation in the
16
wintertime. In fact, all of our mercury work has been
17
in middle of summer, which I tell my relatives the
18
opposite just, so they don't think I'm a nut, but we
19
work in these different environments, but the laws of
20
chemistry and physics have to be the same in both places
21
. You can't explain mercury behavior in Florida
22
different than you explain it in Michigan. It has to be
23
transferable. There has to be changes in meteorology or
24
temperature or other things that make the behavior of
Page61
1
mercury explainable, and that's what we're finding. We
2
are finding repeatable behavior in all the environments.
3
I have done an extensive amount of
4
work in New England. We're doing work out west, work in
5
the Mediterranean Sea, in the Arctic. All these
6
environments keep telling us that we are better
7
understanding the chemistry and physics of mercury, and
8
that body of knowledge that we have acquired over the
9
past 20 years really lends to credence to what we are
10
finding. It doesn't make it more blurry. It makes a
11
more better defined picture.
12
Q. So in order to draw conclusions from the
13
Steubenville work to, say, Illinois, you would actually
14
have to do the work you described of testing the
15
deposition and doing the methodology you described. Is
16
that correct?
17
A. Again, I think that's a question that gets
18
back to my comment earlier. When we talk about
19
identifying the contributions of the specific sources or
20
source type to the state of Illinois, in particular, you
21
can't go back in time and collect the rain. You can't
22
go back in time and collect the air that was coming
23
through the state, so the only way that you could do
24
that would be to go and collect samples in the state at
Page62
1
the time that you wanted to do that contribution.
2
However, we actually have collected
3
samples in Illinois. We collected them as part of my
4
Lake Michigan Mass Balance Study, which is samples in
5
Chicago, at IIT, and we have done an extensive amount of
6
work around the Great Lakes Basin, so we have data that
7
allows us to extrapolate and extend our understanding of
8
what's going on to areas in Illinois that I think are
9
very relevant and accurate.
10
Q. Were there any conclusions in your
11
testimony based on that data specific to conditions in
12
Illinois?
13
A. I believe there were.
14
Q. Were those conclusions the same as the
15
conclusions -- the same type of conclusions, i.e, the
16
contribution of local sources, local coal-fired sources
17
to local impacts?
18
A. Again, this is one of the things that
19
we -- I hate to keep saying it again, but -- the data we
20
collected in those studies was collected in the `94,
21
`95, `96 time frame. At that time frame, municipal
22
waste and medical waste incinerators were the dominant
23
source of mercury, and in the air shed and the Great
24
Lakes, we had a number of very large incinerators.
Page63
1
Plus, the Chicago area has -- the Chicago-Gary area has
2
a number of very large iron and steel production
3
facilities, chemical manufacturing refineries, a number
4
of other sources, so we did make conclusions regarding
5
the sources of the mercury, but the blend of the sources
6
was different at that time.
7
At that time, incinerators and power
8
plants were about the same, and those were -- I don't
9
know what -- 30 something percent each, in terms of the
10
total mercury emissions, and now the one's gone, so now
11
coal utilities are the largest source with incinerators
12
being a much smaller, so the answer we got then were
13
applicable to the time that we were making the
14
measurements. The tools that we used are, generally,
15
applicable to any time, but even at that time, though,
16
the contributions we were seeing from coal combustion
17
were I would say, relatively speaking, so if you take
18
the one-third of the mercury emissions coming from coal
19
combustion at that time, we were seeing signals in the
20
20- to 40-percent range, in terms of the contribution of
21
coal combustion to the levels that we were seeing in the
22
atmosphere and in the deposition, so it was consistent
23
with the emissions that were occurring at that time. If
24
we went today and took at look, we would see a different
Page64
1
picture.
2
Q. So is the answer to that question no.
3
A. The long-winded answer was given because I
4
think it helped to relate to the conclusions we drew
5
there. We saw the influence of coal combustion on the
6
regional scale, local-regional scale, in those studies.
7
The relative importance of coal combustion was different
8
at that time largely due to the differences in
9
emissions.
10
Q. So you don't have any recent data with
11
respect to Illinois or the Chicago area that would allow
12
you to draw specific conclusions. Is that correct?
13
A. I have not made any measurements in
14
Illinois since the 90's. However, the conclusions I
15
believe that we made there are still consistent. We've
16
still been making measurements in Michigan, which is
17
downwind of Illinois, and so we do still have data that
18
helped us understand the sources that are in Illinois,
19
but no, we do not have Illinois-specific measurements.
20
Q. Thanks.
21
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Having arrived
22
at 10:30.
23
CROSS EXAMINATION BY MR. MATOESIAN:
24
Q. Did you say that, even in the early 90's,
Page65
1
you were --
2
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: They cannot
3
possibly hear you in the back of the room.
4
MR. MATOESIAN CONTINUES:
5
Q. Did you say that, in the early 90's, 20 to
6
40 percent of deposition you were finding was coming
7
from coal-fired power plants in Chicago based on your
8
sampling?
9
A. I said that, from our earlier studies, we
10
were seeing 20 to 40 percent contributions from coal
11
combustion to the ambient concentrations in deposition
12
that we were measuring.
13
Q. Has there been a significant change in the
14
weather patterns or meteorology for Illinois in the last
15
10 years?
16
A. Wow. This is where the legal, versus
17
scientific, definition comes in. What's the definition
18
of -- no. I would say that the simple answer is that
19
the last decade has been interesting; one,
20
meteorologically, but is not that consistent with the 30
21
year climatology, so no, there's not a significant
22
change, although the weather over the last decade has
23
certainly been unusual in many cases.
24
Q. Aside from Algora, so you would expect to
Page66
1
see, at least, a similar contribution from coal-fired
2
power plants if you were to take samples?
3
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: You are going
4
to have to speak up.
5
MR. MATOESIAN CONTINUES:
6
Q. You would expect to see, at least, similar
7
contributions from coal-fired power plants today as you
8
did then?
9
A. My expectation actually would be that we
10
would see a larger fraction of the contribution from
11
coal-fired utilities because the incinerator sector has
12
been controlled, so that would mean that it could be a
13
similar amount of total mercury, but it would be a
14
larger fraction of the contribution from coal
15
combustion.
16
Q. Thank you.
17
A. I don't have any evidence to suggest that
18
it would have declined.
19
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: At this point,
20
we are going to have to take a break. The board meeting
21
is at 11 o'clock. As I stated earlier, there is a
22
pending motion in this rulemaking. If the Board rules
23
on that motion in the meeting, I will have copies of the
24
record available when we come back at one o'clock.
Page67
1
(At which point, the hearing was
2
adjourned.)
3
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Before we go
4
back on the record, I want to let you know, in addition
5
to granting the motion to amend today, the Board
6
declined to offer any of the direction asked for by
7
Ameren, Kinkade and Dynegy to the Hearing Officer.
8
That being said, what I would
9
anticipate is that next week, as we approach the end of
10
the week, we'll see where we're at. As I indicated in
11
my Hearing Officer Order setting this hearing, we will
12
look at the schedules. We'll see where we're at, and
13
see what we need to do, as far as continuing, perhaps,
14
cross-examination, extend prefiling deadlines, and that
15
sort of thing, and we'll do that as we proceed here, and
16
we know where we're at.
17
That being said, I think we will
18
proceed with Dr. Keeler. I believe we are on Dynegy
19
Question No. 9.
20
MR. RIESER: Eight, I believe.
21
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: I thought we
22
finished with eight.
23
MR. RIESER: Eight related to methyl
24
relationship --
Page68
1
DR. KEELER: I did answer that. That
2
was beyond the scope of the project we conducted.
3
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Question No.
4
9.
5
DR. KEELER: Question No. 9: "Do
6
different types of emission sources for mercury have
7
different mercury deposition patterns? Yes. We would
8
have different deposition patterns, and again, I'm sorry
9
to keep repeating myself, but the deposition pattern is
10
going to be a function of the type of mercury emitting
11
from the stack, so from the type of stored source it is,
12
and clearly, the characteristics of the stack, the
13
height of the stack, the velocity at which the emission
14
comes out and so forth, so yes, emission patterns will
15
be different depending on the type of mercury and from
16
the different type of sources.
17
Question 10: "Do different types of
18
sources emit during species of mercury?" Yes. There's
19
quite a bit of information in the literature now showing
20
that different source types do emit different types of
21
mercury. As we have already mentioned, municipal waste
22
and medical waste incinerators emit a predominant amount
23
of mercury in the reactive or ready depositable form,
24
greater than 80 percent. Power plants, based on the
Page69
1
work that's been done by the utility industry, suggests
2
that it's closer to 67 or so percent, but that the
3
amount that's emitted from a specific source depends
4
largely on the exact amount of coal that's used, the
5
type of coal and the blending and so forth.
6
Motor vehicles will emit a different
7
blend, less reactive, more elemental. Chemical
8
manufacturing tends to emit more elemental mercury than
9
reactive, so yes, the form that's emitted varies
10
dramatically from one source to another. "What elements
11
or facts influence or" --
12
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
13
Q. The 67 percent number, with respect to RGM
14
emissions from coal-fired power plants, you said that's
15
-- do you recall the source of that number.
16
A. Presbo, et al., if I recall.
17
Q. Presbo?
18
A. Presbo. He works at Frontier
19
Geoscientists, and I believe that's the citation that I
20
have from that.
21
Q. And then that's -- do you know if that
22
represents an average of all coal-fired power plants in
23
the country?
24
A. It was the ones that were tested using --
Page70
1
I, honestly, don't recall which technique was used, but
2
there were a number of plants that were tested, and that
3
was the average. It was 67, plus or minus 15 or 17
4
percent, something like that.
5
Q. That was my next question. Wasn't there a
6
range?
7
A. Yeah. There was, and again, my
8
recollection is that it's 15 or 17 percent.
9
Q. I think we talked -- we talked earlier
10
about different coals. Would that -- I think we talked
11
earlier that that would be affected, also, by the
12
different coals that were used as fuel, correct, certain
13
types of coals?
14
A. Yeah. My understanding of the state of
15
knowledge right now is the parameters that are most
16
important, which is the next question, if that's okay if
17
I continue answering that. The things that affect the
18
or influence the type of mercury that's emitted for coal
19
combustion, the chlorine content of the coal is very
20
important, not only the amount, but the nature of the
21
fly ash that's inherent in that type of coal, and people
22
have indicated things like the iron content also plays a
23
role, and the ash content can vary dramatically from one
24
type of coal to another, and then it can actually absorb
Page71
1
some of the elemental mercury that's emitted, or in
2
other cases, it might tend to have more particulate
3
mercury, so those things are very important, in terms of
4
how much mercury comes out, and again, that's not my
5
area of expertise. I'm just going based on what I have
6
been told.
7
Q. Do power plant configurations affect this,
8
as well?
9
A. Yes. Again, that's not my area of
10
expertise, and perhaps somebody else would be better off
11
handling that question, but I know control technology
12
will affect the speciation that comes out of the stack.
13
Q. Do you know in what way?
14
A. Well, again, it's a fairly complex
15
relationship because it depends on what the emissions
16
were, to start with, so if it's a high chlorine coal,
17
which has lots of reactive mercury. If a wet scrubber
18
is used, you will tend to use more mercury. It it's
19
elemental mercury, a wet scrubber is not going to be as
20
effective, but again, that's not area of expertise. I
21
recommend that one of the engineers answer those
22
questions.
23
DR. KEELER: So that was 11 --
24
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: I don't think
Page72
1
we've addressed nine or 10, yet.
2
DR. KEELER: 9, I answered, "Do
3
different types of emissions source --
4
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
5
Q. Let me can ask more question, if I may. I
6
don't believe you addressed steel manufacturing, in
7
whether those are sources, in your view.
8
A. Yes. They are sources of mercury. Any
9
sources that uses fossil fuel for its combustion fuel is
10
going to have a mercury emission, and so iron and steel
11
industry definitely does and the manufacturing of steel
12
produces mercury. We find -- we found quite a bit of
13
particulate mercury, in fact, in the Chicago area, for
14
example, due to the iron and steel industry.
15
Q. Would the amount of mercury and the type
16
of mercury produced or emitted -- put it that way --
17
vary on the type of steelmaking process? For example,
18
wet furnaces, as opposed to other types of operations?
19
A. Again, I'm not an expert on the steel
20
manufacturing process, so I would rather not comment on
21
that.
22
Q. Thank you.
23
MR. BONEBRAKE CONTINUES:
24
Q. Do refineries also emit mercury?
Page73
1
A. Yes, they do.
2
Q. What forms of mercury are emitted by
3
refineries?
4
A. We see predominantly elemental mercury
5
when we see influence from refineries.
6
Q. And in connection with the work that you
7
had mentioned concerning Lake Michigan, were you finding
8
any elemental mercury from refineries associated with
9
the mercury in Lake Michigan?
10
A. I know that we saw refinery influences on
11
the particular matter, and I don't recall that we saw a
12
strong signal from refining in the gaseous mercury.
13
DR. KEELER: Now, Question 11: "Is
14
the mercury deposition pattern for incinerators
15
different than it is for coal-fired electric generating
16
utilities?" I would say yes, and for the two reasons
17
that the questions were asked before me. The form of
18
the mercury coming out of the two are -- can be
19
different and the height of the stacks of an
20
incinerator, versus a coal-fired utility would also be
21
quite different, although some of the electric
22
generating units in the state have relatively low stack
23
heights compared to some of the larger ones elsewhere.
24
Some down in the couple-hundred-feet range. That's more
Page74
1
typical of an incinerator stack height. In general,
2
those two things will cause a difference in the
3
deposition pattern.
4
MS. BASSI CONTINUES:
5
Q. Is the state you're referring to Illinois?
6
A. Yes, it was.
7
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
8
Q. Is it correct that the differences are
9
associated with stack heights, and in what way is it
10
associated with stack heights?
11
A. Well, lower stack height putting out large
12
amounts of reactive mercury is going to really tends to
13
push things towards more localized deposition than a
14
high stack height with the same amount of reactive
15
mercury, and then if you have less reactive mercury with
16
less stack height, you have very localized, within a few
17
kilometers of the plant type deposition.
18
Q. When you refer to some power plants in
19
Illinois having stack heights of a certain height, which
20
plants were you referring to?
21
A. I have -- I guess this is a list of all
22
the power plants in the state sorted by stack height.
23
Q. We have extra copies, don't we?
24
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: We need to
Page75
1
admit that as an exhibit.
2
DR. KEELER: He's going to get some
3
copies.
4
MR. RIESER CONTINUES: Why don't we
5
hold on the issues on this issue, until I can get a copy
6
of this. Thank you.
7
DR. KEELER: Question 12: "Not all
8
inorganic mercury deposited to all water bodies from the
9
atmosphere become methylated. Is that correct?" Yes, it
10
is correct. Some of the mercury that's deposited to a
11
water body, depending upon the form that it's deposited
12
in, can actually be transformed into elemental mercury
13
and again be re-admitted from service, so some fraction
14
of the mercury gets immediately sent back up. Some of
15
the mercury that's deposited to a body of water will
16
attach to particles and sink to sediments, so that it
17
won't instantaneously be methylated. It has potential
18
to be methylated at a later time.
19
MR. BONEBRAKE CONTINUES:
20
Q. What percentage of mercury, as you just
21
described it that's deposited into water bodies is
22
transformed and re-admitted?
23
A. It's water-body specific.
24
Q. Is there any general range that results of
Page76
1
that process, recognizing that there's going to be
2
variability among water bodies?
3
A. I would say there's no general range that
4
I can say.
5
DR. KEELER: Question 13: "Some of
6
the mercury deposited into water bodies is reemitted.
7
Is that correct?" As I just mentioned, yes, it is. In
8
the Lake Michigan Mass Balance Study, for example, of
9
the mercury that was deposited to Lake Michigan, about
10
one-third was reemitted, so two-thirds of the mercury
11
went into the water body and one-third was reemitted.
12
Question 14: "The amount of
13
methylation" --
14
MR. BONEBRAKE CONTINUES:
15
Q. Just a follow-up to that answer, do you
16
have a reason to believe that that percentage would be
17
significantly different for other water bodies in the
18
Midwest?
19
A. I believe that it would be different than
20
inland lakes. It may be very typical for the large
21
lakes, but I think you would get a real range in
22
concentrations, depending on the aquatic chemistry.
23
Q. In the lakes, would you have thought it to
24
be higher or lower?
Page77
1
A. Again, it would vary quite a bit just as
2
the chemistry in the lakes varies quite a bit. The DOC
3
and the calcium carbonate and other basic chemicals that
4
are in the lakes, those concentrations vary over, like,
5
the whole state of Michigan, so I would think the
6
evasion rates would vary, as well.
7
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Mr. Zabel.
8
MR. ZABEL CONTINUES:
9
Q. Just as a follow-up to that question, was
10
a similar analysis done on the deposition of the
11
Everglades?
12
A. We published a paper looking at the earth
13
surface exchange of mercury. It was not a mass balance,
14
so I can't put a quantitative number on how much mercury
15
was deposited versus how much was reemitted. The other
16
difference is that we were able to calculate the flux
17
from Lake Michigan based on measurements of the water
18
body. The situations clouded in the case of the
19
Everglades because of the vegetation that's there.
20
There's a strong tendency for the aquatic plants to
21
actually mediate some of that evasion, so some of the
22
mercury that's in the sediment actually gets sent into
23
the atmosphere via the plants, and so we didn't do like
24
an evasion from the marsh land as part of that study.
Page78
1
Q. So there would be two reemission
2
mechanisms in the case of the Everglades?
3
A. That's correct. Instead of just being
4
from water, there would be another one.
5
Q. Is the reemission process that we've been
6
discussing limited to elemental mercury deposited into a
7
water body?
8
A. Yes.
9
Q. So the higher the level of deposited
10
elemental mercury to a water body, generally speaking,
11
the higher the reemission rate for a water body?
12
A. I would not say that's correct.
13
Q. What about that statement is inaccurate?
14
A. I would say that there's probably not been
15
enough work to suggest that the more elemental that goes
16
in, the more elemental that comes out. That's not
17
necessarily consistent with some of the work that we've
18
done.
19
Q. Although the percentage remains constant,
20
and there's a greater volume of elemental going in,
21
that's going to suggest a greater volume of elemental
22
being reemitted, right?
23
A. That's if there were no other processes
24
affecting the elemental mercury once it was deposited to
Page79
1
the surface, which there are tremendous processes.
2
Mercury attaches to particles as soon as it transforms,
3
so it's not a correct statement.
4
MR. ZABEL CONTINUES:
5
Q. I guess a follow-up question of mine, did
6
the model used in the Everglades take reemission into
7
account?
8
A. The cycling model does, yes.
9
Q. How does it do this?
10
A. Again, I think it has biotic than
11
antibiotic, which means through chemically transforming
12
the mercury into elementally formed evasion (phonetic)
13
and also biologically changing the form of mercury into
14
-- the exact mechanism, you would have to refer to the
15
report in order to be able to get that.
16
Q. I guess what I was curious about was how
17
you indicated that it was more difficult in the
18
Everglades than in Lake Michigan, how that was
19
quantified in the model then.
20
A. It was modeled.
21
Q. It was just modeled?
22
A. Yes.
23
Q. There was no collection of data comparable
24
to Lake Michigan?
Page80
1
A. No, there was not. There was no
2
concurrent, long-term monitoring of that. The work that
3
we did in the Everglades was part of a specific dried up
4
deposition project that we did where we made
5
measurements through the winter and summer seasons to
6
get, for the first time, some answers on evasion and dry
7
deposition of mercury to that ecosystem, but there was
8
no long-term record that would be comparable that could
9
be used in the Florida TMDL work as we did with the Lake
10
Michigan Mass Balance Study.
11
Q. So when you did the modeling on the
12
Everglades, you had assumptions about reemission?
13
A. I didn't make any assumptions. The
14
Tetricheck people had to take the knowledge that was
15
gained from other people's work and use that in their
16
models, yes.
17
MR. RIESER: My question has been
18
asked an answered.
19
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Mr. Harley.
20
MR. HARLEY CONTINUES:
21
Q. Would you elaborate on how the chlorine
22
content of coal effects the emission of reactive
23
mercury?
24
A. The question was on the chlorine content
Page81
1
of coal and its relationship to RGM emissions.
2
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: The RGM, is
3
that --
4
DR. KEELER: Reactive gaseous mercury.
5
The relationship suggests that the more chlorine that's
6
in the coal, the more reactive gaseous mercury you are
7
going to form, and that gaseous mercury would be in the
8
form of chloride coming out of the stack, so or some
9
other compound that would have chlorine in it, so more
10
chlorine, more reactive mercury has been the tendency.
11
Q. Is a higher concentration of chlorine in
12
coal associated with bituminous or sub-bituminous coal?
13
A. That's a good question. It's actually a
14
fairly complex question to answer. Just saying that
15
sub-bituminous coal would have less chlorine or more
16
chlorine is too simple an answer, I believe. It think
17
it's quite variable. In general, it may be that the
18
average for bituminous coal is slightly higher than for
19
sub-bituminous, but again, I think you can find pretty
20
wide variability within those two types of coal, and
21
then with other coals, so I think that's not that
22
straightforward.
23
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
24
Q. So you don't agree that, on average,
Page82
1
sub-bituminous coal has significantly less chlorine than
2
on an average of bituminous?
3
A. No. I said I think it's possible that the
4
average might be less for sub-bituminous than for
5
bituminous, but I said there's a large variability in
6
that, and that I think you would have to look at the
7
specific type of coal to make sure that, in fact, that
8
was true. The important parts in that is that
9
sub-bituminous coal also will have less BTU's, so you
10
have to burn more of it, and so the relationship between
11
the chorine in the mercury and the energy content really
12
are important, in terms of whether you put out more
13
reactive mercury from that same type of -- or from that
14
same amount of energy generated, so again, coal and
15
chemistry of coal is, again, not my area of expertise.
16
I'm not a geologist, but I'm going based on, again, much
17
of the fine work that was done by the utility companies.
18
Q. Based on that fine work, focusing in on
19
one type of sub-bituminous coal, I believe is how it's
20
frequently used around here, with respect to Power River
21
Basin coal, do you have an understanding of what
22
chlorine levels we see in Power River Basin coal is
23
significantly less than chlorine levels seen in Illinois
24
bituminous coal?
Page83
1
A. I would say that statement is correct, on
2
average.
3
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Just so you
4
know, you have to speak directly into that microphone,
5
especially when you turned your head. We started to
6
lose you. Mr. Harley, did you have a follow-up?
7
MR. HARLEY CONTINUES:
8
Q. So does it follow, therefore, that a coal
9
plant operator who switched from low chlorine
10
sub-bituminous coal that's from less, to higher chlorine
11
bituminous coal from Illinois, there would be a
12
co-benefit in doing that in reducing, potentially,
13
mercury emissions from that facility?
14
A. I understand your question. Let me answer
15
this. Probably the reason we're having these hearings
16
in first place is this is a complex issue. The control
17
technologies that will be used play a big role on being
18
able to answer that question. From going to many
19
meetings, such as the one I went to in china where they
20
talk about control technologies and so forth, the
21
vendors that I heard speak said that, if there was more
22
reactive mercury coming out of the coal-fired utility
23
because of higher chlorine content, that they would be
24
able to remove the mercury more easily, than if it was
Page84
1
all in the elemental form, which requires a little bit
2
more difficult control measures, so if, in fact, what
3
you said was true, and they had the proper controls,
4
then, perhaps, they could reduce the total amount of
5
mercury more easily than if it was more in the elemental
6
form, but again, there's a million assumptions in that
7
that there's controlled technology. The exact type of
8
coal, the ash content, all of those kinds of things, so
9
there are a lot of engineering variables that go into
10
that that make it a difficult question to answer.
11
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
12
Q. Would it be accurate that a lot of these
13
questions that were answered or were, at least,
14
discussed, and if not, will be part of the technology
15
discussion that will probably take place next week?
16
MR. KIM: Yes.
17
MR. RIESER: That's the beauty of a
18
simple answer. Let me go back, if I may.
19
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: We're getting
20
some interference. I think we are going to switch it
21
out.
22
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
23
Q. Just to go back to the issue of the
24
reemission of mercury, is it accurate that the way the
Page85
1
cycle works through the water body that some of both of
2
the RGM and the elemental mercury that are deposited to
3
a water body are reemitted as elemental mercury?
4
A. Yes. The mercury that deposits in either
5
form will be reemitted in the form of elemental mercury.
6
Q. And so to the extent it's reemitted, that
7
bad mercury is not available for methylation, correct?
8
A. That's correct.
9
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Before we go
10
on to the next question, Mr. Kim, did you have those
11
exhibits?
12
DR. KEELER: The table that's being
13
submitted is a listing of the Illinois coal-fired EGU
14
stack heights by the facilities.
15
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: And we
16
reserved Exhibit No. 27 for the Detroit Study, so we
17
will mark this as Exhibit 28, if there's no objection.
18
Seeing none, it's Exhibit 28.
19
(Exhibit No. 28 was admitted.)
20
MR. RIESER: I have the Detroit Study,
21
if it would be a good time to throw it in.
22
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Sure. We'll
23
go ahead and mark it. I have also been handed "The
24
Detroit, Michigan, Source-Receptor Relationships for
Page86
1
Atmospheric Mercury in Detroit, Michigan," which we
2
reserved Exhibit No. 27 for. If there's no objection,
3
we will mark that as Exhibit 27. Seeing none, that's
4
Exhibit No. 27. Thank you.
5
(Exhibit No. 27 was admitted.)
6
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Mr. Rieser,
7
you had some questions based on the stack height I
8
believe that you wanted to ask.
9
MR. RIESER: You know what, why don't
10
I look at it at a break, and we will come back to it.
11
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: That's fine.
12
Then I believe we are on Question 14 from Dynegy.
13
MR. ZABEL CONTINUES:
14
Q. Just a quick question on Exhibit 28, it
15
says, "Ranked by gross load megawatts." I don't think
16
the Baldwin station has 13 megawatts. Is it megawatt
17
hours?
18
A. I believe that's correct.
19
Q. Then it must have some particular year. I
20
guess I don't know what the number represents, if you
21
could find out Mr. Kim and let us know?
22
MR. KIM: We can find out.
23
MR. BONEBRAKE CONTINUES:
24
Q. A follow-up, do you recall, Dr. Keeler,
Page87
1
the average height of the municipal waste combustion
2
units in question in the Florida Study?
3
A. The average weight?
4
Q. Average stack height.
5
A. I don't recall what the average stack
6
height of all those waste combusters are, but they tend
7
to be 150, or so, 150 or 200 feet or less, but I don't
8
know what the average is.
9
Q. Do you know what the average was with
10
respect to the stack height of the medical waste
11
incinerator unis at issue in the Florida Study?
12
A. It was definitely less than 150 and maybe
13
in the Florida report I -- I don't recall if that
14
information was in there or not.
15
DR. KEELER: Question 14: "The amount
16
of methylation that can occur in a water body depends on
17
site-specific conditions. Is that correct?" Yes.
18
Question 15: "Demethylation can also occur. Is that
19
correct?" Yes. Question 16: "Is it possible to
20
accurately predict the amount of methylmercury that will
21
be found in a fish based on atmospheric deposition of
22
the inorganic mercury to the water body that the fish
23
lives in?" As we have discussed, models have been
24
developed that will predict the amount of methylmercury
Page88
1
found in a fish based on the atmospheric deposition of
2
inorganic mercury to the water body that the fish lives
3
in, and these results appear to give very reasonable
4
answers. The models that apply to the Florida
5
Everglades as part of that TMDL gave results that
6
compare I think very favorably with the actual measure
7
data of mercury in the fish in those ecosystems, so I
8
would say that it is possible to predict.
9
MR. HARRINGTON CONTINUES:
10
Q. Was that model adopted for the
11
Massachusetts Study.
12
A. I'm not aware of the Massachusetts Study.
13
Q. Were there any -- was that model utilized
14
in any other studies?
15
A. I believe it has been used in other
16
studies and off the top of my head, I'm not sure where
17
else, but I think there were other TMDL's that
18
Tetricheck has worked on.
19
Q. Was there any further verification of a
20
model with actual field data to determine its accuracy?
21
A. The data has been continually collected in
22
Florid, and it seems to track the predictions very well,
23
so they continue to collect biological samples from the
24
Everglades area where the modeling was performed, and
Page89
1
yes, they are doing continued verification, and the
2
model predictions are tracking pretty nicely.
3
Q. That's with respect to Florida?
4
A. Yes.
5
Q. That's very peculiar and unique
6
environment, is it not, the Florida environment?
7
A. It is a unique environment.
8
Q. And would that model necessarily be
9
applicable anywhere else as adopted in Florida?
10
A. As I mentioned earlier, you would not use
11
the same parameters that you would use in the Florida
12
case. You would adapt them using the ecosystem
13
parameters that you would measure in that specific
14
ecosystem, and so the things that were adopted, as you
15
suggested, for Florida would not be appropriate to
16
another location. You would have to use correct aquatic
17
chemistry data, environmental conditions, climatology,
18
all those kinds of things, in other words, for that
19
model to work. I believe they did apply it where it was
20
developed, up in Wisconsin.
21
MR. BONEBRAKE CONTINUES:
22
Q. The model that was used in the Florida
23
study, Dr. Keeler, that model was used to predict
24
methylmercury levels in fish tissue at only one
Page90
1
location. Is that correct?
2
A. Again, I think it predicts at more than
3
one location, and again that was not my work. That was
4
work done by Tetricheck for the State of Florida. It is
5
detailed in that report.
6
Q. You recall this morning we looked at some
7
language in the Florida report, which indicated that
8
three sites in the vicinity of what was referred to as
9
the "hot spot" in half of the -- what was called the
10
cohorts, there was no change in methylmercury fish
11
tissues. Do you recall that?
12
A. Yes, I do.
13
Q. Does that, therefore, mean that the model
14
that was used in the Florida Study was, in half of those
15
cases, predicting no change in methylmercury levels?
16
A. The observation was that there was no
17
change, correct, in that table.
18
Q. That's what we talked about this morning.
19
A. Right, so the model predicted that you
20
would see a change, and in some of the fish, it was born
21
out that there was change, and some of them there was
22
not, that's correct.
23
Q. So the model did not accurately predict
24
methylmercury fish tissue levels, at least, at all
Page91
1
locations. Is that correct?
2
A. That would be a correct statement.
3
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: I think that
4
finishes Dynegy's questions. Mr. Kim, where are we going
5
next?
6
MR. KIM: I believe we are next going
7
to move to Ameren's questions to Dr. Keeler. I'm kind
8
of hopeful when we get to Prairie State's questions that
9
they have already answered them in the course of others,
10
but we will look and see.
11
DR. KEELER: Question 1: "According
12
to your report and written testimony, the scope of your
13
presentation to the IPCB is to describe the source of
14
the mercury deposition to the Great Lakes, and to
15
specifically discuss the importance of coal-fired
16
utilities to the region. A: Is it correct that you
17
were not asked to address the impact of Illinois coal
18
plants on mercury deposition within Illinois, and B: Is
19
it correct that you have not performed any
20
source-receptor studies which determine impact of
21
Illinois coal plants on mercury deposition in Illinois,
22
and C: Are you aware of any -- are you aware of whether
23
any such studies have been performed?" I was asked by
24
the State of Illinois to address the work that we have
Page92
1
done looking at the impacts of various sources on
2
mercury deposition to the region. They did not ask me
3
to not look at it, the State of Illinois, as the
4
question suggests. I was asked to look at all sources
5
and all of the sources of deposition to the Great Lakes,
6
including the state of Illinois. It is correct that I
7
have not performed an Illinois-specific source-receptor
8
study, but having concluded Illinois within the greater
9
context in the Great Lakes in the study that we have
10
done, we have made measurements, as I mentioned earlier,
11
in three times one in Kankakee, Illinois, as part of the
12
Lake Michigan Urban Air Toxic Study, and Chicago as part
13
of the Lake Michigan Mass Balance Study and in
14
Bonnville, Michigan, as part of that same study, but we
15
-- again, those were in the context of looking at Lake
16
Michigan Study, not specifically, looking at Illinois.
17
I'm unaware of any other studies that have been
18
performed, specifically on the state of Illinois for
19
this purpose.
20
MR. BONEBRAKE CONTINUES: Did you use
21
the phrase "Illinois-specific study" in that answer?
22
A. I believe I did, yes.
23
Q. What do you mean by "Illinois-specific
24
study"?
Page93
1
A. The question asked me if I -- "Is it a
2
correct that you were not asked to address the impact of
3
Illinois coal plants on mercury deposition with
4
Illinois?" That is incorrect. That's what I meant by
5
"specific," that specific study about coal plants in
6
Illinois on Illinois. That was a double negative.
7
MR. KIM: It's a funny-worded
8
question. I think he's -- I think he's tried to answer
9
it within the frame work of the question. If you would
10
like to rephrase it.
11
MR. BONEBRAKE: It's not my question.
12
DR. KEELER: 1-A that is no, that is
13
incorrect.
14
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
15
Q. It's incorrect in that you -- start over.
16
What you were asked to do with your testimony was look
17
at all the studies that have been performed in the Great
18
Lakes region and summarize them, correct? That was one
19
of your tasks.
20
A. No. They asked me to look at the studies
21
that my laboratory has performed looking at the sources
22
of mercury to the Great Lakes region.
23
Q. Page two of the question -- excuse me --
24
page two of the testimony under "Purpose of Testimony"
Page94
1
says, "I was asked by the Agency to prepare a
2
state-of-the-art assessment of the sources of mercury
3
deposition to the Great Lakes, and specifically, discuss
4
the importance of coal-fired utilities on the deposition
5
of mercury to the region." Correct?
6
A. That's what I tried to paraphrase just
7
now.
8
Q. By "Great Lakes," did we discuss this
9
morning that the Great Lakes reference is to the Great
10
Lakes Basin which only includes a small portion of the
11
state of Illinois?
12
A. The Great Lakes Basin reference was only
13
in reference to the one modeling study that I referred
14
to where we were looking at within the Great Lakes
15
Basin, sources to those, which are outside the Great
16
Lakes Basin, but our body of work is larger than just
17
the Great Lakes Basin.
18
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: That would
19
have been Exhibit 26, the report.
20
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
21
Q. Thank you. When you use the term "Great
22
Lakes" in this sentence, what did you mean by it?
23
A. I mean all the Great Lakes states,
24
basically.
Page95
1
Q. All the Great Lakes states?
2
A. And the province of Ontario.
3
Q. When you use the term "region" in this
4
context, does this mean the same thing?
5
A. Same thing, yes.
6
Q. But other than the studies you described
7
that had sampling stations in some points in Illinois,
8
you haven't done any studies within the state of
9
Illinois?
10
A. Only the studies that we collected in the
11
samples in Illinois are the ones I'm referring to.
12
MR. ZABEL CONTINUES:
13
Q. Just so I'm clear, Doctor, the Great Lakes
14
study was all five Great Lakes?
15
A. Yes.
16
Q. I don't count Lake Champlane, as some New
17
York congressman would.
18
A. Actually, it was a Vermont congressman,
19
but yes, that's a correct statement.
20
Q. So that was the region that ranged from --
21
A. From Minnesota, to New York in this case.
22
Q. Thank you.
23
DR. KEELER: D: "What is the basis
24
for your statement at the end of your testimony that,
Page96
1
`Areas with elevated mercury deposition due to emissions
2
related to coal combustion have been identified'"? This
3
statement is based upon the work that we've done in the
4
state of Ohio as part of the Steubenville Study where we
5
performed a receptor modeling study to determine that,
6
approximately, 70 percent of the mercury deposited via
7
wet deposition at that site was related to coal-fired
8
utility emissions. E: Are these areas in Illinois?"
9
How have they been identified?" The answer to that is
10
no. F: "Did you participate in drafting the technical
11
support document, TSD, prepared by Illinois EPA for
12
these proceedings?" Yes. I contributed to the
13
Technical Support Document that is found in the
14
appendices.
15
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
16
Q. You added the report that's Appendix B to
17
the TSD. Is that correct?
18
A. I don't recall what the --
19
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Yes, that's
20
correct.
21
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
22
Q. Did -- were you involved in the drafting
23
of the section which I believe is Section 5 that deals
24
with atmospheric deposition?
Page97
1
A. No.
2
Q. Did you review it?
3
A. After it was submitted I looked at it,
4
yes.
5
Q. But not before it was submitted?
6
A. No, sir.
7
DR. KEELER: Question No. 2: "On page
8
81 of the TSD it states that `Thus it can be expected
9
that significant mercury emissions reductions in
10
Illinois will yield significant reductions of mercury
11
deposition in Illinois.' Did you author this
12
statement?" No. Do you -- B: "Do you make the
13
statement in your report in Appendix B to the TSD or in
14
your testimony?" I did not make that direct statement
15
in either of those. C: "Do you believe that there is a
16
factual basis for this statement?" And my answer is
17
yes. I do believe it's a factual basis in that
18
statement.
19
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
20
Q. Could you please describe the factual
21
basis which may have been well where you were going.
22
A. Again, the factual basis for the agreeing
23
with that statement is that we have done a body of work
24
now over the past 15 years looking at the sources of
Page98
1
mercury deposition to areas all over the Great Lakes
2
Basin, including some sites here in the state of
3
Illinois, which suggest to me that coal-fired utility
4
emissions are having an impact on mercury deposition in
5
the state, and do have an impact on the mercury
6
concentrations in the air in the state of Illinois.
7
That's why I agree with those statements.
8
Q. Is there quantification that you have
9
performed that can measure that amount?
10
A. Again, the Lake of Michigan Mass Balance
11
Study we collected samples for 18 months at Bonnville,
12
Illinois, in wet deposition, as well as the gas and
13
particle phase. Again, that's gas and particle phase
14
mercury at that site and source proportion was done on
15
that data, as well as the data that was collected in
16
Chicago, Illinois, looking at the various sources, and
17
that work was actually in the doctoral thesis of Matt
18
Landis, and that can be looked at there. Some of that
19
work is in the peer-reviewed literature, and in the
20
paper that you suggested, and in that work, they found a
21
significant -- again, my memory is that it was about 20
22
to 30 percent of the ambient mercury in deposition was
23
related to coal combustion.
24
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Mr. Harley.
Page99
1
MR. HARLEY CONTINUES:
2
Q. The work that you just described, is that
3
the basis of the statement in your conclusion that 21
4
coal-fired power plants in Illinois emit close to four
5
tons per year of mercury into the atmosphere?
6
A. No. That's based on the emissions
7
inventory.
8
Q. Thank you.
9
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
10
Q. The reference you had to the Chicago
11
Study, is that the paper we talked about this morning
12
that I think is Exhibit 26, "Atmospheric Mercury in the
13
Lake Michigan Basin" --
14
A. Yes.
15
Q. Is it accurate that the sampling for that
16
study was primarily applicable to the lake?
17
A. No, that's incorrect. Correct. We did
18
have sampling over the lake, in addition to running five
19
sites, Bonnville, Chicago, a site on the border between
20
Illinois and Wisconsin, a site in South Haven, Michigan,
21
and a site in Sleeping Bear Dunes, Michigan. At the
22
same time, we were taking measurements at a site in Lake
23
Superior up at Eagle Harbor, as well as in Dexter, so
24
all of those sites were simultaneous, so the great
Page100
1
majority of the samples that are collected were not
2
collected over the water.
3
Q. And did you also say you've done a source
4
apportionment as part of that study?
5
A. Yes. Dr. Landis did a source
6
apportionment as part of his thesis work.
7
Q. That source apportionment consisted of
8
associating certain chemicals with certain types of --
9
certain types of groups of chemicals together? Would
10
that be correct?
11
A. It was a variance of the type of analysis
12
that we did in Ohio, yes. It was a receptor modeling
13
calculation that used both the elemental and chemical
14
composition of the precipitation or ambient samples
15
together with the meteorological data.
16
Q. When you do that type of study, does that
17
allow you to identify specific sources or groups of
18
sources?
19
A. Receptor modeling, in general, unless it's
20
done on a plant that's in isolation out in the middle of
21
nowhere really gives you an answer for the source
22
category. It does not give you an answer for a specific
23
source.
24
Q. So by doing that type of study, you
Page101
1
couldn't identify a particular power plant as the sole
2
source of coal combustion in the chemicals that you're
3
seeing. Is that correct?
4
A. The only way that that could happen is if
5
they were -- if it was distance wise separated from
6
other plants. If there were two plants next door to
7
each other, it would be difficult to do that, yes.
8
Q. You also make the statement that -- this
9
is on page 4515 of the report, that?
10
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Specify --
11
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
12
Q. Over the paper -- excuse me -- and this is
13
Exhibit 26. You done remember every page of every
14
report?
15
A. No, getting hard to do that.
16
Q. Right down at the bottom, the paragraph
17
begins --
18
A. 4511?
19
Q. 4515. At the bottom, it says, "In fact,
20
the urban air shed" -- and you're referring to the
21
Chicago-Gary open area -- "the urban air shed was a
22
complex system of numerous point sources in distinctive
23
meteorology." Do you see that?
24
A. On 45 --
Page102
1
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: It's on the
2
left side.
3
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
4
Q. It begins "The spacial -- you see that?
5
A. I see that.
6
Q. We're in the same place. You still
7
believe that, I assume, that the urban air shed was a
8
complex system with numerous point systems in
9
distinctive meteorology?
10
A. Yes. I think urban areas are, generally,
11
that way.
12
Q. Does that mean that it matters a great
13
deal where you put your sampling point, in terms of what
14
findings you are going to get?
15
A. This paragraph, specifically, was
16
addressing where you put the reserve vessel over the
17
water in order to be able to see specific source
18
influences, yes.
19
Q. So you would agree with me that it matters
20
where you put your sampling point?
21
A. It matters really in a big way when
22
talking about over-water measurements, yes. It matters,
23
generally, yes, where you put your sampling sites, but
24
it really made a big difference in terms of over-water
Page103
1
measurements because of the strong stability over the
2
water during the summer months.
3
DR. KEELER: Question 3: "Is it
4
correct that the conclusions in your testimony regarding
5
the sources of mercury deposition were based on the work
6
you did in Steubenville Ohio?" Yes. "Has that work
7
been published in any peer-reviewed journal?" The work,
8
at this point, is now in the process of being published
9
in a peer-reviewed scientific journal. We were hoping
10
to submit the paper about a year ago, but it was held up
11
in that process as a request from the then EPA
12
administrators, since that is a cooperative agreement,
13
which means that we're working collaboratively with
14
scientists from the U.S. EPA of Research and Development
15
that our paper be subjected to, both, a strict and
16
rigorous internal EPA review by their scientists, as
17
well as an independent outside review by independent
18
scientists outside of the EPA before we submitted it to
19
the journal, largely, because of the sensitivity
20
surrounding the upcoming CAMR rule, so that delayed the
21
publication submission by almost a year, so the
22
publication is right now in the process of being
23
finalized, and we expect publication of peer-reviewed
24
literature within the next three months.
Page104
1
MR. RIESER: I'd just like to say
2
that, because we don't have the actual report with its
3
supporting data and sources and specific conclusions,
4
that, should this proceeding be continuing after that
5
study is published, that I reserve the right to ask
6
additional questions of Dr. Keeler after the time that
7
it's published.
8
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: So noted.
9
DR. KEELER: Question B: "Is it
10
possible that you will change any of your statements or
11
conclusions as a result of the peer review process?"
12
No. The reviews came back quite favorably, and only
13
made suggestive and clarifying comments regarding any of
14
the science that was performed, and so no, none of the
15
conclusions will have changed, and even the quantitative
16
statements will not change. C: "Is the underlying data
17
available for review?" EPA policy, as well as that of
18
most scientists is that, once the peer-reviewed
19
publication becomes in press -- I mean, not in press. I
20
mean has come out in peer review that the underlying
21
data can be made available, so that's the answer.
22
That's a fairly consistent way that everyone approaches
23
intelligible property rights when it comes to scientific
24
investigation.
Page105
1
Q. So the answer to C is no. Is that
2
correct?
3
A. The underlying data is not available today
4
for review. I should offer, though, that as part of the
5
peer review process that EPA undertook, it was
6
unprecedented, in terms of the rigor of the evaluation.
7
We provided them, not only the raw data that we
8
collected as part of the study, but we also provided
9
them with the exact model and model formalisms, together
10
with all the input parameters that we used in our
11
calculations to allow them to independently run the
12
models and come to their own conclusions, and in
13
addition, apply their own receptor models and
14
statistical approaches to look at the data, and came up
15
with the exact same answers that we did in that review
16
process, so in terms of the external review, that was
17
done.
18
Q. Is it accurate that, both, yourself and --
19
is it Mr. or Dr. Landis?
20
A. Doctor.
21
Q. Both, yourself and Dr. Landis, have
22
presented Powerpoint presentations that include some
23
portions of the data?
24
A. Do you mean that you don't have?
Page106
1
Q. Is it true that you presented Powerpoint
2
presentations that contain some portions of the data?
3
A. Yes.
4
Q. And that was selected by you, and I assume
5
Dr. Landis for the purposes of those presentations?
6
A. What was selected by me?
7
Q. The data that you chose to present at
8
those presentations.
9
A. Yes.
10
Q. And the answer to the question and then
11
the question in terms of what I have and don't have, of
12
course, is whether there's a copy available of the
13
presentation made to LADCO in February that I didn't
14
get.
15
A. Yes. There is a presentation copy
16
available that you can have, yes. All the public
17
presentations are available. Most of them -- I think
18
four or five --or publicly available on the website and
19
some of the utility groups already have the LADCO
20
presentation.
21
Q. But you understand that the LADCO
22
presentation has not been on LADCO's website, so to my
23
knowledge, it hasn't been available, so you can make it
24
available is part of the process?
Page107
1
A. Yes.
2
Q. Thank you. When can we expect to get a
3
copy of that? Can we get one today, so we can talk
4
about that tomorrow?
5
A. I would have to check to make sure that I
6
have that on my laptop and if I do, I can get a copy of
7
that to you.
8
MR. BONEBRAKE CONTINUES:
9
Q. You mentioned some feedback from U.S. EPA
10
to the data that you provided to the Agency. Has that
11
feedback been in writing?
12
A. The feedback from EPA regarding the data?
13
Q. Regarding the data that you submitted for
14
their review in the Steubenville Study?
15
A. We got a written review, yes, that was
16
provided from the peer reviewers, yes.
17
Q. Peer reviews at U.S. EPA?
18
A. Those were -- no, there was not. These
19
were external peer reviewers.
20
Q. Who were retained by U.S. EPA?
21
A. By an outside contractor working for U.S.
22
EPA.
23
Q. Is a copy of those comments publicly
24
available?
Page108
1
A. You would have to direct that question to
2
the U.S. EPA.
3
Q. Do you have a copy of those?
4
A. I do, yes, not with me. I have a paper
5
copy back in my office. I don't carry them with me. It
6
was probably about 200 pages worth of comments because
7
of the extensive review that they did.
8
DR. KEELER: Question D: "Have you
9
ever released, for public review, any description of the
10
methodology you used for source attribution?" We have
11
made presentations at a few forums that describe the
12
methodology for source attribution, and as I mentioned
13
earlier, all the methods that we used have been
14
published extensively in the peer-reviewed literature,
15
so we did not use any new techniques like, PMF and
16
Unmix, which are two statistical approaches developed by
17
Paatero and Hopke, as well as Ron Henry at USC, and it
18
has been extensively peer reviewed.
19
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
20
Q. And how often have those methodologies
21
been applied to mercury?
22
A. Well, that's one of the novel parts of
23
what we have done. They have not been applied very
24
often for mercury.
Page109
1
Q. Have they been applied ever for mercury?
2
A. I'm not sure of the answer to that
3
question. There is a possibility that there's one
4
application, but I don't know.
5
Q. And we've talked about this methodology
6
for source attribution briefly in different parts. Is
7
this the same methodology you used in Florida?
8
A. Actually, the methodology we used in
9
Florida was similar. The paper deadvantage et al. 1999
10
that was in "Environmental Science and Technology" used
11
a similar approach. It was a factor analysis
12
multivaried technique. The techniques that we're using
13
now have are a decade later, and they have gone through
14
a whole tremendous amount of improvement, including the
15
statistical handling and uncertainty analysis, and so
16
forth, so it's a much better and much more robust
17
statistical approach to doing source apportionment than
18
what we used in Florida.
19
Q. This probably as good a time as any for
20
you to describe that method.
21
A. The Florida methodology?
22
Q. No, the source attribution methodology
23
that you used in Steubenville.
24
A. Sure . As I mentioned earlier, what the
Page110
1
receptor modeling does -- the receptor model methodology
2
utilizes measurements taken at a location, and those
3
measurements include -- in this case, we make
4
measurements of precipitation every time it rains, so
5
every day that rain falls, we collect that, and then we
6
take and analyze those samples very carefully in a Class
7
I clean laboratory at the University of Michigan for the
8
concentrations of trace elements by some fairly
9
sophisticated analytical techniques, ICPMS, ion-coupled
10
plasma, mass spirometry and for mercury and major ions,
11
so we have a list of about 40 trace elements. Ions and
12
chemical constituents in every single rain sample. The
13
statistical approach then takes all of those samples and
14
works backwards, statistically, to determine what were
15
the major factors that contributed to the variation that
16
was found in the precipitation mercury levels, so it
17
takes this very complex large database and kind of
18
mathematically determines what sources contributed to
19
mercury in each of those samples. That methodology can
20
be done -- or that approach is done in multiple ways.
21
In this case, in our paper, we have used both positive
22
matrix factorization, which is a program written by
23
Dr. Paatero and Hopke, which ensures that the factors
24
that are calculated -- or the source factors that are
Page111
1
calculated are mathematically stable, and also, allow
2
you to input the uncertainty in the measurements that
3
you make. And then another model that's independent,
4
but a similar mathematical concept is Unmix. Again
5
these are both factor analysis models is independent and
6
doesn't allow you to include the uncertainty
7
calculations into that. We ran both of these models
8
independently. In fact, one of the questions, the next
9
question is "What were your respective roles on the
10
Steubenville project?" One of the ways that we worked
11
on this project collaboratively is EPA has several
12
receptor models that are expert in using these models
13
and developing these models and at the University of
14
Michigan we independently ran the PMF and unmixed models
15
from the researchers that were doing the work at EPA, so
16
that we could then compare the results that we got. In
17
the process of doing the initial work, both models wound
18
up giving us comparable answers. One of the questions
19
later on was why did I say about 70 percent contribution
20
from coal-fired utilities? The reason for the
21
approximate was so that I could more precisely give the
22
answer for a combination of the two models. PMF gave a
23
contribution to coal-fired utilities of 70 percent, and
24
Unmix actually gave a contribution of 74 percent, but
Page112
1
there was an uncertainty of about 15 percent, about both
2
of those numbers, and therefore, the mean for the two I
3
could have put 72 percent, 72.1, or whatever it was, but
4
I put it short hand as 70 with an uncertainty about
5
those numbers, so those methods, as I said before, have
6
being rigorously compared and developed over the last 15
7
years down at EPA, and in the scientific community.
8
Q. Let's take this a step at a time to break
9
it down. In order to identify -- when you use the term
10
"source" in the phrase "source-receptor modeling" --
11
A. Yes.
12
Q. Again, as you said earlier, that refers
13
not to a specific source, but to a class of sources,
14
correct?
15
A. Yes. That's correct.
16
Q. So you got coal-fired power plants
17
automobiles, steel plants, whatever, and in order to
18
identify a given source, is it correct that you identify
19
certain chemical fingerprints, if you will, associated
20
with those types of emissions?
21
A. Yeah, and that's the key to the whole
22
thing is that we do identify what we call chemical
23
signatures. It 's like a fingerprint for a person.
24
Each major source category will have a specific
Page113
1
fingerprint, or signature, and sources that are in the
2
same source category have fairly similar signatures. If
3
they were dramatically different, then they would look
4
like two different sources, so two different coal plants
5
that very different signatures, so one that burned one
6
type of coal, versus burning another type of coal
7
exclusively, would look like two different sources. In
8
this case, we have signatures that have been developed
9
through the literature over the past, since the mid
10
70's, that give us ideas about what these signatures
11
should look like from coal burning, from motor vehicles,
12
from iron and steel production, from all kinds of
13
different sources. One of the things that sets my group
14
apart from the work of other receptor models is that we
15
do all of our own chemical analysis in-house, so we are
16
involved in collecting actually source-signature data
17
from plants, from motor vehicles out in the field at the
18
sources, and then also analyzing the samples that we
19
collect in the field, so that there's no possible
20
differences between analytical laboratories, so we've
21
been very instrumental in providing the actual source
22
signatures and using the advanced analytical techniques
23
that we have, we actually are pushing the forefront in
24
finding new elements and new chemical markers and new
Page114
1
signatures for the various sources that we're looking
2
at.
3
Q. I think you said in that answer that the
4
chemical signature for coal plants is the same across
5
all types of coal plants. Is that correct?
6
A. No. That's not what I said. I said that
7
if two plants were burning different types of coal that
8
they would have a different signature.
9
Q. So have you identified different
10
signatures for plants that burn bituminous, as opposed
11
to plants that burn sub-bituminous coal?
12
A. We have analyzed coal from that
13
sub-bituminous coal versus bituminous coal, and it has a
14
different characteristic signature. You -- it's getting
15
back to the question that was asked about the chlorine
16
content. The chemistry of the coal is different.
17
That's why there's different mercury, different reactive
18
mercury formation. We are working towards trying to
19
identify an ambient signal that would allow us to
20
separate out the two types of coal in the ambient air.
21
Q. But at this point, you don't have that
22
capability?
23
A. No, and it wasn't important, in terms of
24
the receptor modeling that we were doing. It's just a
Page115
1
goal that we have.
2
Q. And is it accurate that the
3
source-receptor studies you have performed to date have
4
been primarily in areas that burn in bituminous coal
5
such as Steubenville?
6
A. The type of coal that's mined in that area
7
is certainly sub-bituminous coal. I don't have a record
8
of what actually was burned in the plants in the
9
surrounding area on a day-by-day basis. I don't know if
10
that's available or not, but as I understand it, there's
11
blends of sub-bituminous and bituminous coals burned in
12
the power plants in the general region.
13
Q. And in basing the identification of
14
sources on a chemical signature, does that allow you to
15
make a determination as to the proximity of those
16
sources to your sampling point?
17
A. No. Just the observed data by itself does
18
not have implicit within a distance, so what we do is
19
employ hybrid models or meteorological information
20
together with the help from these receptor models to
21
tell us the distance scale and the specific source
22
locations that were contributing to the mercury
23
deposition, and basically, it's taking all the available
24
meteorological data we can get from surface data to
Page116
1
upper air data to numerical models to do a very detailed
2
analysis of every storm event, and then match that
3
together with the help from the receptor models.
4
Q. Is that similar to the type of analysis
5
that was done in -- was that the type of meteorological
6
analysis done at Steubenville?
7
A. Yes.
8
Q. Was that using hy-split and there was one
9
other model that I think was referenced in the Florida
10
Study.
11
A. In the Florida Study?
12
Q. I'm sorry. I've read too many studies.
13
A. I have done too many studies.
14
Q. The Ram Study (phonetic)?
15
A. No. We did not employ rams in the
16
Steubenville Study.
17
Q. What where are the meteorological models
18
that you used in Steubenville?
19
A. We employed hy-split and we -- because of
20
the fact that we've been developing our own version of
21
the chemical model on the C-MAQ, which is the EPA
22
mercury model, we've been using MM-5 as the
23
meteorological preprocessor.
24
Q. And so it's the use of the meteorological
Page117
1
models that allows you to make a statement with respect
2
to the proximity of the source?
3
A. Yes, sir, and actually, the observed data
4
is much more powerful than, actually, even the models.
5
Q. In what way? When you say "observed data"
6
what are you referring to?
7
A. I'm talking about using NEX-RAD, surface
8
maps, observable detailed meteorological records from
9
the Great Lakes region. Most of the work that we've
10
been doing, which is something that I've been,
11
personally, doing for 25 years now, is taking observed
12
meteorology and using that to understand aerial issues
13
in various parts of the country.
14
Q. So the observed data you were referring to
15
is the observed meteorological data?
16
A. Data provided by the National Weather
17
Service, but I should mention that we also use -- we
18
have on-site in Steubenville our own meteorological
19
tower and our own set of meteorological data that we
20
also utilize.
21
Q. Why don't we go on to four, then.
22
MS. BASSI CONTINUES:
23
Q. In these signatures, in the signatures
24
that you were talking about that you have developed or
Page118
1
that have been developed over a number of years, as I
2
understand it, there is a different signature for
3
different types of industrial source categories or
4
non-industrial sources of categories. How can you tell
5
the relative contribution from each type of contributor
6
that has a signature?
7
A. That comes down to the mathematical
8
process that's involved in the, both, PMF and Unmix.
9
Are you familiar with multivarious statistical
10
techniques?
11
Q. Oh, no. You have to make this simple.
12
A. It comes down to -- there are a number of
13
elements and ratios of one element to another that
14
define the fingerprint for a specific source, and what
15
it, basically, does -- last night after I ate all these
16
jellybeans I think I woke up with a stomach ache from
17
the jellybeans, and I was trying to figure how I could
18
use the jellybeans to draw out this analogy for you.
19
And I decided I shouldn't go there.
20
Q. But you knew the question was coming.
21
A. Yeah, because it really is a good
22
question, and it's one that I think, as you get into the
23
mathematics, that you can see the beauty of it. It's
24
basically an ID value problem for someone who's done
Page119
1
physics or engineering. It, basically, is an
2
optimization. If you have a series of unknowns, and you
3
have a series of things that you know, such as the
4
elemental composition, you can solve those equations to
5
get the best solution to make all the equations true,
6
and in doing that, the answer, basically, is the
7
Ion-deductor (phonetic) or the source factor that it
8
calculates, and in doing that, it tells you how much
9
variance is explained, or how much of the data can be
10
explained by that one particular source, and then you
11
take and relate the amount of mercury that you collected
12
to the amount of these other trace elements in that
13
source, and you can get a statistical relationship, and
14
around that, then it gives you goodness of fitness
15
statistic and a whole bunch of statistics that tell you
16
how well your model performed. If there isn't a
17
relationship there, your model will give terrible
18
results and your goodness of fitness statistics come out
19
lousy, and in this case our goodness of fitness
20
statistics came out very good and the relationships were
21
very clean. And so we were very, very confident, and
22
very happy with the outcome of the results from the two
23
years worth of analysis.
24
DR. KEELER: I was on question 4-A I
Page120
1
didn't answer. "What portion of the work was performed
2
by Mr. Landis?" As I mentioned earlier, this was a
3
collaborative project with U.S. EPA Office of Research
4
and Development, and Dr. Landis is our project manager
5
on the project, and he's involved in all facets of the
6
research, from site set-up, to sampling, to analytical
7
results, to modeling. And so he's been involved in all
8
facets of the project. "What were your respective roles
9
in the Steubenville work?" The RFP was written by EPA,
10
so they asked far specific targeted pieces of work, but
11
in a cooperative agreement, the EPA cannot ask us to do
12
anything. It's cooperative study, so all the work that
13
we are doing is the work that I initiated through my
14
direction through the approaches that I chose to use in
15
this project. I'm the project director and principal
16
investigator on the project and involved in the same,
17
from site set-up, to site sampling, to analysis, to
18
interpretation of the data.
19
C: "Has he published any of his
20
findings regarding Steubenville in any peer-reviewed
21
journal?" No. The intellectual property rights belong
22
to the University of Michigan, and the code belongs to
23
the U.S. EPA. Within a cooperative agreement, again,
24
the principal investigator is given the first right to
Page121
1
publish the scientific results. However, we are joint
2
partners in this endeavor.
3
"Are these data available for public
4
review?" Our data -- I assume that's what you're asking.
5
Again, it's a normal procedure to make available
6
scientific results, once the peer-reviewed journal and
7
article comes out.
8
E: "To what extent did you rely on
9
work performed by Mr. Landis?" Again, I'm not sure to
10
what extent or what context you are asking the question,
11
but Dr. Landis is an excellent scientist and we relied
12
upon his work flout the project, and value his judgment
13
in all aspects of the project.
14
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
15
Q. Did the two of you come to the same
16
conclusions regarding the Steubenville Study."
17
A. We worked on this project. As I mentioned
18
earlier, EPA began doing some of the modelings, and we
19
were doing some of the modeling independently, and it
20
was hard not to come to the same conclusion. In this
21
case, the importance of coal-fired utilities on the
22
mercury deposition in Ohio was so significant that we
23
did come to the same conclusions. I think as our
24
peer-reviewers showed us, it's difficult to come to any
Page122
1
other conclusions.
2
Q. You make the statement in your testimony
3
in the second paragraph of your conclusion that, on page
4
five, "Source-receptor studies have recently been
5
completed that indicate the coal-fired utilities
6
contributed, approximately, 70 percent of wet deposition
7
measured at a site in Eastern Ohio over a two-year
8
period, from 2003, to 2004," which I assume is this
9
Steubenville Study we are talking about?
10
A. Yes, it is.
11
Q. In one of the presentations that
12
Dr. Landis gave, didn't he say, specifically, that it
13
was not coal-fired utilities, but coal and fuel
14
combustion, and not solely electric utility generation?
15
A. I would have to look at the presentation
16
to -- I know that one of the early briefings that we are
17
forced to give, one of the things that occurred is that
18
EPA, Tim Opelt, who was the acting -- or not the acting,
19
assistant administrator at EPA at the time, really
20
pushed EPA to try to get us to get our results out
21
because of the impending rules, and because they thought
22
it was pertinent to writing the rules, and in that
23
process, he urged Matt to go to Washington at a very
24
early date when we had preliminary results and present
Page123
1
those results, and so one of the interesting things in
2
the briefings is that you will see that there are
3
changes from one briefing to the next, in terms of some
4
of the quantity of numbers, and the number of decimal
5
places, and other ways that things are listed in there,
6
and if it's one -- if it's a briefing to Tim Opelt, I
7
don't know if it says on the front or not.
8
Q. It does. It's the briefing for Tim Opelt,
9
April 27, 2005. This is a Powerpoint presentation for
10
which I do not have copy, but will by tomorrow, so it
11
can be introduced as an exhibit before the Board.
12
A. That is the first mention of our
13
preliminary results, so in that presentation, Dr. Landis
14
would have been the one who would have made those
15
slides.
16
Q. Did you work with him in putting these
17
slides together?
18
A. I would have worked with him on the
19
results that are included in those slides, but I did not
20
work next to him putting those slides together.
21
Q. I'm reading from one of the slides
22
entitled "Results" and I have just the one copy, so I
23
can show this to you to verify, but if I can read from
24
it, and again, I will have copies for the exhibit
Page124
1
tomorrow. "Approximately, 70 percent of the mercury wet
2
deposition in the Steubenville site is attributable to
3
local slash regional fossil fuel coal and oil combustion
4
sources," and then there's a bullet under this that
5
says, "Not entirely attributable to electrical
6
utilities."
7
A. Okay.
8
Q. Do you agree with that statement?
9
A. I think, at that time, when we had gotten
10
those preliminary results we had not gotten to the point
11
where we had done a more definitive interpretation.
12
Q. What had you done in the intervening time
13
that allowed you to change the conclusion to the one
14
that you have in your testimony here?
15
A. We have done a considerable amount of more
16
work, one of which was to try to understand, as Matt
17
said here in this presentation, where he put coal and
18
oil combustion sources, we actually took a much closer
19
look at the sources that were in the area, and the
20
transport and meteorological conditions to go with the
21
just the elemental data that we got to make sure that,
22
in fact, we didn't feel the oil combustion was a major
23
contributor. This was -- I think Matt was trying to be
24
extremely careful in his presentation to Tim Opelt at
Page125
1
that time because, literally, the results popped out of
2
the computer within the same couple of days as when he
3
had to make his presentation, and interestingly enough,
4
this was -- I don't know if it still says -- so briefing
5
for Tim Opelt. I know the version that I had seen
6
actually said, "Not for outside consumption" because --
7
due to the preliminary nature of the work, so that
8
somehow is not on there anymore.
9
Q. No, it's not, and it's available on the
10
U.S. EPA website.
11
A. Actually, is it available on U.S. EPA or
12
on the E-Wire website?
13
Q. U.S. EPA. But I'm not answering the
14
questions here, but that's quite fine. Is the 70 -- the
15
number of, approximately, 70 percent, what were the
16
ranges that you had for that?
17
(A small break was taken.)
18
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Let's go back
19
on the record. Dr. Keeler, you were looking up some
20
information to answer a question from Mr. Rieser.
21
MR. KIM: While he's looking that up,
22
Exhibit No. 28, which I believe was the table that shows
23
stack heights Mr. Zabel had asked a question about one
24
column of numbers, and I believe that that should be the
Page126
1
correct identification for those numbers is gross load
2
by megawatt hours, and those figures represented the
3
average of the highest three yearly gross loads as
4
reported by U.S. EPA, CAMD, for the period of 2001,
5
2005. So over that five-year period, the average of the
6
three highest.
7
MR. ZABEL: That makes a great deal
8
more sense. Thank you.
9
MR. RIESER CONTINUES: Looking this up
10
-- could you read back the last question to Dr. Keeler?
11
(The previous question was read by the
12
court reporter.
13
DR. KEELER: The PMF model has
14
predicted a value of 70 percent a d the Unmix model
15
predicted 74 percent. Again, this is -- I just picked
16
up an earlier version, so I'm not positive that these
17
are the final numbers, so I'll give you the range. We
18
did two years' worth of measurement. The entire year of
19
2003 and the entire year 2004, and we did the
20
apportionment on the two years combined, and estimated
21
using the two different models, how much mercury came
22
from coal-fired utility boilers to the deposition of
23
mercury for 2003 and 2004, separately. The main reason
24
for doing this is that the deposition from one year to
Page127
1
another can vary dramatically. In 2003, the measured
2
mercury deposition in Steubenville was about 13
3
micrograms per square meter. In 2004, it was 19.8
4
micrograms per square meter, so there's a fairly large
5
difference between the two years. In 2003, the mean
6
contribution from coal-fired utility boilers was 9.5
7
with the range of 7.2 to 15.8. That's a five to 95
8
percent confidence interval around that mean. What has
9
been developed over time in these models is the ability
10
to propagate uncertainty through the models, and
11
continue to re-run the models varying the concentrations
12
that we got in the samples to simulate uncertainty, and
13
you can run this over hundreds and hundreds of times,
14
and then you can get a mean, plus an uncertainty range
15
around those numbers to give you a better sense of how
16
robust your solution is, so that's what that refers to,
17
and for the Unmix model, it calculated a mean
18
contribution of 9.9 with a confidence interval of five
19
to 15. For 2003 and for 2004, the mean contribution
20
from PMF was 12 with a confidence interval of nine to
21
20, and the Unmix model predicted a mean of 15 with a
22
mean of 8 to 23. So both models give, if you were to
23
take the means, or whatever, they gave very similar
24
results, in terms of percentages. And the uncertainty
Page128
1
in the numbers is what I gave you, so that's the
2
confidence interval on those.
3
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
4
Q. Are there estimated coal-fired utility
5
boiler percentages associated with those numbers, as
6
well?
7
A. I don't have them in front of me, but
8
that's what the 70 percent was, and the mean for the two
9
years is 70 and 74 percent, 70 for PMF and 74 for Unmix.
10
You were asking me previously about the Landis briefing
11
where it had fossil fuel, oil, plus coal, and again, I
12
just wanted to make sure it was clear that that briefing
13
was done, literally, a couple days after the initial
14
analysis was done only on the 2003 data, and at that
15
time, the statistical robustness of the solution was
16
such that we weren't very confident in the solution that
17
we were getting because we didn't have a large enough
18
sample size, and hence, why we went and incorporated in
19
the 2004 data into this analysis, and you asked about
20
the question about coal-fired utility boiler
21
contributions, versus coal combustion I believe is what
22
you were referring to, correct, all coal combustion
23
sources, and initially, when we --
24
Q. I think it was just combustion sources.
Page129
1
A. Okay. So we were able to separate out the
2
oil combustion from the coal combustion very cleanly, so
3
there wasn't any need to have that designation in the
4
follow-up briefings and in our final conclusions.
5
Q. I think you said, with respect to the
6
publication, that you were looking to begin or submit
7
for publication around October or so of `05, but then
8
you had to run it threw a peer-review process?
9
A. That's correct.
10
Q. So by October of `05, you had everything
11
pretty well nailed down?
12
A. Yes, sir?
13
Q. And I think you --
14
A. You say, "About October of `05." I can't
15
tell you whether it was November 1, or I mean, to be
16
honest, it was the end of October. I know it was before
17
Thanksgiving and I know -- but I don't know the exact
18
time.
19
Q. Plus or minus one holiday, in other words.
20
I think you said, also, that you participated in an
21
international workshop on mercury control for coal
22
combustion in Beijing. Is that correct?
23
A. Yes.
24
Q. And you were there with Dr. Landis?
Page130
1
A. I was, yes.
2
Q. And Dr. Landis gave a presentation at that
3
regarding your findings?
4
A. He did, yes. Had had some other
5
information.
6
Q. Did you work with him on putting that
7
presentation together?
8
A. Again, the results that went into that
9
presentation were ones that we co-put together, but I
10
did not help him actually put the numbers on the slides
11
or build the tables or anything like that.
12
Q. But --
13
A. I did not review his presentation, no.
14
Q. You didn't review his presentation?
15
A. No.
16
Q. Did you watch his presentation?
17
A. I did watch his presentation, yes.
18
Q. Did you agree with it at the time you
19
watched with it?
20
A. Did I agree with it? Since it was a
21
collaborative study, I didn't -- I concurred with his
22
conclusions.
23
Q. I would like to show you what's going to
24
be marked as exhibit --
Page131
1
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: We'll mark
2
them in the morning. That's probably the best to wait,
3
until tomorrow when you actually have them.
4
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
5
Q. What I have, for ease and quickness, is a
6
copy of the title page and two pages within the slides
7
that Dr. Landis prepared for the Beijing presentation.
8
In the interest of time and getting this thing out
9
quickly within the period of the break, again, I will
10
get colored copies of the whole thing, and I will bring
11
those tomorrow, so the whole thing can be submitted to
12
the Board as an exhibit, but for purposes of the
13
question, we only need these couple of pages, so Doctor,
14
if you need to look at the whole thing in order to look
15
at these and verify that you remember what else was in
16
there, I have got a copy, but if I can work with these,
17
that would be great to start.
18
A. I don't believe the presentation varied
19
all that much, and I certainly believe that the
20
conclusions and results, or whatever, did not vary from
21
one presentation to the other. The exact numerical
22
numbers might be slightly different. I know we did
23
refine the way we did the uncertainty analysis from one
24
time to another, so that they were consistent between
Page132
1
the PMF and Unmix, so there might be some slight
2
variances in the numerics, but the conclusions and the
3
results don't change all that much. If you look on the
4
first page of this three-page exhibit, and again, this
5
is just a portion of the whole thing, the page entitled
6
"Preliminary Steubenville Source Apportionment Results."
7
A. Yes.
8
Q. 2003-2004 and heading across the top is
9
"Measured Mercury Wet Deposition; PMF Estimated CFUB
10
Contributions," CFUB is identified as Coal-Fired Utility
11
Boiler, and "Unmix Estimated CFUB Contribution." Do you
12
see that?
13
A. Yes, I do.
14
Q. So there are percentages provided in the
15
columns for PMF estimated CFUB contribution, in addition
16
to absolute numbers, and those percentages, as you can
17
see for PMF for 2003, 73 percent; 2004 is 62 percent.
18
The Unmix percentage contribution are 60 percent, and
19
for 2003 for 2004, it's 59 percent. Do you see that?
20
A. Yes, I do.
21
Q. Are these the same numbers that are in
22
your report that's being presented for publication?
23
A. No, they are not.
24
Q. What way have they changed?
Page133
1
A. The numbers I read to you are the numbers
2
that --
3
Q. I don't recall you reading a percentage
4
number.
5
A. Because I didn't have that calculation in
6
front of me, but I did not -- these numbers were
7
preliminary data, so this presentation that Matt gave in
8
China was based on the preliminary results from the
9
April-May time frame.
10
Q. So as of the date of this, October 31,
11
when this was given, I thought you said that around that
12
time you had submitted this for public for peer review
13
and publication.
14
A. Just to correct what you just said, no,
15
that's not what I said, and I was specific in saying
16
that we would hope to submit the paper for publication
17
at the end of October, and at that time, EPA asked us to
18
put into a peer-review process.
19
Q. So you submitted it for peer review around
20
this time, October?
21
A. Yes.
22
Q. And was the paper complete at the time you
23
submitted it for peer review?
24
A. Yes, it was. Perhaps, you don't give
Page134
1
presentations, but very often you put together a
2
presentation on the plane as you're going over, and
3
sometimes you lose the materials that you have from the
4
previous presentation to put together the new
5
presentation, and I suspect that that's what Dr. Landis
6
did on this account. As I said before, I didn't work
7
with him on putting this presentation together, and so I
8
can't verify that's what he did. He was in the back of
9
the plane. I was in the front, as it should be.
10
Neither of us in the First Class, however, but in fact,
11
this was a preliminary -- as it says on there
12
"Preliminary Steubenville Source Apportionment."
13
Q. Did you make any efforts to correct it, to
14
correct these numbers when they were presented?
15
A. You don't have an opportunity to correct.
16
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Excuse me,
17
Mr. Rieser. I apologize for interrupting, but I just
18
have a couple questions I would like to ask for
19
clarification. Dr. Keeler, you're saying the numbers --
20
the numbers that are in your final Steubenville Study
21
results are different from these, that these reflect the
22
preliminary numbers from the preliminary data?
23
DR. KEELER: Yes that's correct. Let
24
me just back up for a second. We were asked to rush to
Page135
1
do this analysis by EPA, so that they could include this
2
in the mercury rulemaking. Hence, we did a 2003 quick
3
analysis. We told them that we felt this was not a
4
robust solution to the question they were asking, so we
5
included -- we went and we got the 2004 data and
6
included a two-year data set, so we could provide them
7
with a more robust analysis. They, basically, were
8
after us on a daily basis to try and come and provide
9
these answers. In April, I went and made a presentation
10
of very raw and preliminary analysis. Now, at the
11
university, we do this all the time where someone will
12
get a result, present that, and everyone will critique
13
them and give them comments and suggestions for ways to
14
improve things. Because of the importance of this
15
issue, it was done on a federal level because it was
16
cooperative agreement, and so EPA was doing this behind
17
the scenes in their own internal labs. These
18
presentations that were given, many of them were from
19
one EPA group to another EPA group or Dr. Landis to the
20
assistant administrator were meant for information
21
purposes, and give them some update as to what was going
22
on. These were never intended -- and that's why the
23
word "preliminary" is given on these, is that these were
24
never intended to be final. This was preliminary work.
Page136
1
At this time, we hadn't even finalized the database. We
2
were still working very diligently to get the final data
3
base put together, so that the data that went into this
4
analysis was not even finalized at this time. The
5
presentations that I have been asked to talk to you
6
about are just that. They are preliminary results that
7
came along with the presentations that were given in
8
different venues by Dr. Landis, but these do not
9
represent the final numbers.
10
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Thank you.
11
Sorry. I was a little confused on all that.
12
MR. RIESER CONTINUES: Mr. Kim, I'm
13
trying to remember if you were here for the part about
14
asking for the LADCO slides. Do you have Dr. Keeler's
15
LADCO slides?
16
MR. KIM: We don't have those, at
17
least, to the best of my knowledge. I think the person
18
in control of those would be Dr. Keeler, so --
19
DR. KEELER: As I mentioned, I will
20
check to see. I didn't see it on this, but if I don't
21
have it, I can ask somebody to E-mail that for me.
22
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
23
Q. If we could have those for tomorrow, I
24
would appreciate it. Let me -- while we have this lull
Page137
1
here, let me go back to an item about chemical
2
signatures. You have certain elements that you
3
associate with certain types of source emissions,
4
correct?
5
A. Again, I'm sorry. I couldn't hear what
6
you were saying.
7
Q. When you do the chemical signature
8
analysis, you have certain elements that you associate
9
with certain types of emissions, correct?
10
A. Yes.
11
Q. You also identify percentages associated
12
with those types of sources, correct, X percent coal, Y
13
percent steel?
14
A. Yes.
15
Q. Now, when you are looking at the analysis
16
-- the initial chemical analysis just has X amount of
17
mercury, X amount of selenium and X amount of sulfur,
18
etc., correct, among other elements that you analyze?
19
A. For all intents and purposes, yes.
20
Q. How do you derive the percentage of -- I
21
assume there's, like, one element of mercury, X
22
micrograms of mercury, correct, in the sample data that
23
you're looking at?
24
A. We make measurements of every time it
Page138
1
rains, how much mercury deposition is found in every
2
single sample.
3
Q. How do you derive the percentages of
4
mercury that are associated with a given source
5
category?
6
A. The statistical method, PMF model or Unmix
7
model, calculates for each sample the absolute amount of
8
contribution from each of the samples, and calculates
9
how much mercury is predicted to come from that source
10
factor.
11
Q. What is the derivation of that
12
calculation? I mean, not the mechanics of it,
13
obviously, but what is the model looking for when it
14
makes that decision?
15
A. Well, it's actually a fairly complex
16
answer to that, but it's basically looking for
17
covariation or elements that are changing with time
18
similarly and uses that to determine what sources are
19
contributing to those elements.
20
Q. And the time element, where does that come
21
into the analysis?
22
A. Because we collect a sample every single
23
time it rains, so on each day, it would be a different
24
sample on every single day that it rains.
Page139
1
Q. So it's not just within each individual
2
sample, but all samples taken together. Is that
3
correct?
4
A. Yes, that's correct.
5
Q. Thank you.
6
DR. KEELER: Question No. 5: "In your
7
testimony, you reference a study you performed regarding
8
apportionment of mercury sources in Detroit. A: How do
9
you define the terms of "regional" and "local" for
10
purposes of this study, and B: Did you identify the
11
coal-fired power plants that you considered to be local
12
for purposes of your study?" You're asking me how I
13
defined "regional" and "local" in the paper that I
14
submitted as the Lynam and Keeler paper. Is that
15
correct?
16
Q. Correct.
17
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Exhibit 27 for
18
the record.
19
DR. KEELER: The terms "local" and
20
"regional" often get confused. In fact, recently, a
21
representative from the Electric Power Research
22
Institute incorrectly cited my presentation at LADCO
23
saying that I suggested that regional transport was
24
continental scale transport, which I did not say. Local
Page140
1
transport is actually the transport that's going to
2
occur within one semidiennial (phonetic) cycle, or less
3
than one half of a day. So basically what that means is
4
how far pollutants can travel within about a 12-hour
5
period. A typical transport speed is about five meters
6
per second, which means that -- again, this is on
7
average, that if you're talking about local scale
8
transport being kind of within an urban area. Somewhere
9
up to, depending on the size of the area, but anywhere
10
from very close to up to 150 to 200 kilometers. In
11
terms of EPA modeling, they refer to local scale as less
12
than 10 kilometers. I mean 10 miles in distance scale,
13
very, very close. So that's a very different reference
14
than what I'm referring to. We think of the term
15
"local" in terms of meteorological sense that an air
16
mass can stay fairly consistent through the course of
17
one semidiennial pattern, which is, like I said,
18
somewhere less than 200 kilometers in scale, but will
19
vary tremendously, depending upon the wind speeds, so on
20
a given day, local transport could be as far away as
21
only a few kilometers on a day where there's very heavy
22
winds. During a wintertime period, it might be even
23
longer than that. Regional would then take off from
24
that scale from that local scale to the transport that
Page141
1
is, typically, controlled by synoptic meteorological
2
forcing, which is several days, three to five days, so
3
that can be up to -- maybe a couple thousand kilometers,
4
at most, but no more than that, so transport from Ohio
5
to somewhere east of the Mississippi or west of the
6
Mississippi, possibly, but not to the coasts. That's
7
not regional scale transport. That would be more
8
continental scale transport, so when we're referring to
9
Detroit local, we're really referring to Southeast
10
Michigan in that paper. When we're referring to local
11
in the Steubenville, Ohio, area we're really referring
12
to -- in terms of miles, if people are more comfortable
13
with that, 50 kilometers to 100 miles or so distance
14
scale.
15
Q. So when you use the terms "local" and
16
"regional" in the Detroit paper, they have the same
17
meaning as they will in the Steubenville paper. Is that
18
correct?
19
A. For the most extent, yes.
20
Q. When you use the terms "local" and
21
"regional" you are typically referring not to air mass
22
movements, but to specific things, like sources, talk
23
about local and regional sources?
24
A. We try to talk about sources being local
Page142
1
if they are in the vicinity of the plant, so sometimes
2
the distance scale will be a little bit shorter than on
3
a meteorological sense, so a local source might be in
4
Detroit, for example, the Ambassador Bridge and diesel
5
traffic at the Ambassador Bridge if it's only one
6
kilometer away or kilometer and a half away from our
7
site, so that would be a local source.
8
Q. When you describe local sources -- well,
9
for example, in your testimony in the conclusion on page
10
five -- this is the third sentence of the second
11
paragraph of your conclusion -- "The deposition of
12
mercury is heavily influenced by a few large
13
precipitation events that contribute significantly to
14
the annual deposition and these events are associated
15
with emissions from local slash regional sources." So
16
when you refer to "local slash regional sources" in this
17
context, what types of distances do you have in mind?
18
A. When I refer to "local slash regional
19
scale," it's often more accurate to express that scale
20
when referring to precipitation events because of the
21
nature of the disbursion of pollutants that feed into
22
precipitating systems, so I mean, from sources that are
23
very close, within a few kilometers, to those that are
24
out hundreds of kilometers to even as many as a thousand
Page143
1
kilometers away.
2
Q. So the term "local and regional sources"
3
is used in your testimony means anything, from adjacent,
4
to something that's a thousand kilometers away, maybe
5
even further. Is that correct?
6
A. No, closer.
7
Q. Closer than adjacent?
8
A. No, adjacent to a thousand kilometers or
9
closer.
10
Q. Or closer, so a thousand kilometers is the
11
outer bound.
12
A. Yes. That would be a good --
13
Q. When you use the term "synoptic" what does
14
that mean?
15
A. I was asked this yesterday, and I
16
immediately started to want to give a meteorological
17
answer, and I realized that nobody will understand that.
18
"Synoptic" refers to the scale in which you can see a
19
high and low pressure system on the map, hence the word
20
synoptic, as in visual. It really refers to the scale
21
that you see weather systems on the weather station when
22
you all look at the weather man, and you see a low
23
pressure system or the front coming through, and then
24
you can see a high, it, generally, takes up a region
Page144
1
from Minnesota to New York, so that's a synoptic scale,
2
several days worth of transport.
3
Q. Thank you. Go ahead to B, please.
4
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Mr. Harley has
5
a follow-up.
6
DR. KEELER: You asked me a number of
7
questions, and I gave you a number of answers, and I
8
want to make sure that it's clear I have to be fuzzy on
9
the definition of distances because, when it comes to
10
the meteorology, it varies from day-to-day, from hour to
11
hour, so the transport is not like putting it on a
12
train, and carrying the pollutants consistently away
13
from one place. It's going to vary and the winds don't
14
travel in straight lines and the wind doesn't just blow
15
horizontally. It blows up into the atmosphere, so when
16
we talk about distance scales and local scale transport,
17
versus regional scale transport, versus continental
18
scale, we have to understand that these things are
19
time-varying, and there is a fuzziness to it, so I'm
20
trying to give you a general answer to these questions
21
that give you a sense of what we're looking at, but I
22
don't want to give you the impression that these things
23
are written down, and everything more than a thousand
24
kilometers or 1,500 is somehow a different scale because
Page145
1
that's not the impression I'm trying to give you.
2
Q. So again, looking at your testimony,
3
sentence -- same paragraph on page five,
4
"Source-receptor studies have recently been completed
5
that indicate the coal-fired utilities contributed to,
6
approximately, 70 percent of the mercury wet deposition
7
measured at a site in Eastern Ohio over a two-year
8
period. This finding is not unexpected as the
9
Steubenville site was selected due to its close
10
approximation to a number of coal-fired power plants,"
11
and then we go on to the sentence that I read about
12
local and regional sources, so these large -- the number
13
of large coal-fired power plants are included in these
14
local regional sources that could include all sources
15
within a hundred kilometers -- excuse me, thousand
16
kilometer circle of Steubenville?
17
A. That's correct.
18
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Mr. Harley.
19
MR. HARLEY CONTINUES:
20
Q. You testified that you were able to
21
acquire information about -- you testified that you were
22
able to assess the volume, the total volume of mercury
23
from every precipitation event that occurred over a
24
two-period, from 2003 to 2004.
Page146
1
A. Yes.
2
Q. And you were able to describe that, in
3
different precipitation events, you would find different
4
concentrations of mercury and other contaminants that
5
were present?
6
A. Yes, that's correct.
7
Q. In your study, were you able to estimate
8
the total volume of mercury that was deposited on
9
Steubenville, Ohio, through precipitation over the
10
two-year period?
11
A. Yeah. That's the -- those were the two
12
numbers -- again, my computer went blank, but it was 13
13
point -- I don't remember what the number was.
14
Q. 13 micrograms per square liter (sic)?
15
A. Square meter. If I wasn't clear, I
16
apologize for my mispronunciation.
17
Q. 13 micrograms per square meter would have
18
been the total volume over a two-year period or total
19
mass per square area that was deposited in 2003?
20
A. In 2004, an additional 19 point --
21
whatever the number was that I gave -- micrograms per
22
square meter was deposited at that site.
23
Q. Does your study then go on to consider the
24
fate and transport of mercury which would be deposited
Page147
1
on Steubenville, Ohio, through precipitation at these
2
levels?
3
A. I'm sorry?
4
Q. What happens to that mercury?
5
A. That was not something that we had as part
6
of our scope of work for that project.
7
Q. Do you have an opinion about what happens
8
to that mercury?
9
A. The mercury that's deposited in
10
Steubenville?
11
Q. Yes.
12
A. Well, again, we are making measurements in
13
a place that's primarily grass fields, and so the
14
mercury that deposits there, some small fraction would
15
likely oxidize, or I mean, get reduced and then come
16
back up from the surface. The majority of the mercury
17
that's deposited would probably attach to organic
18
material in the soils and stay there at our site.
19
Surrounding our site is the Ohio River, so mercury that
20
deposits into that, obviously, will get transported down
21
river, and again, some of that mercury is going to
22
attach to particles and go to sediment in the river.
23
Some of that mercury will become methylated and work its
24
way up the ecosystem, and some fraction of that mercury
Page148
1
deposited in the Ohio River will evade, come back out of
2
the water, but those are the main things that would
3
happen to the mercury that gets deposited there. I
4
should add the one part that we haven't talked about at
5
all, yet, is the mercury that's dry deposited, and
6
that's a very important part. Some of the mercury will
7
actually go into the plant material, the trees the
8
leaves, the plants, and actually stay there, and become
9
part of the organic-bound mercury in these plants, which
10
then depending upon the deciduous trees, when the leaves
11
fall, that mercury is deposited to the earth's surface,
12
and then is there for methylation and decomposition as
13
the plant material decomposes, so that's an additional
14
source of mercury to the surface.
15
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
16
Q. Was deposition measured in Steubenville?
17
A. We have been collecting ambient data
18
continuously. We have been using instrumentation that
19
gives us the reactive gaseous mercury forms, the
20
elemental mercury forms and the particulate mercury
21
forms together with meteorological measurements that we
22
are doing on site, and we plan on modeling the dry
23
deposition. We also, in doing this area, did a series
24
of intensive studies, which we have not completed to
Page149
1
date that we will be doing surrogate surfaces, and other
2
new techniques that we have developed to be able to
3
validate and compare to the models that we have
4
developed to do the mercury dry deposition, so at this
5
point, I don't have solid estimates for dry deposition,
6
but it's something that we will have at the conclusion
7
of this study.
8
DR. KEELER: Question 5-B: "Did you
9
identify coal-fired power plants that you considered to
10
be local for the purposes of your study?"
11
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Again, for
12
purposes of the record, we are back to talking about the
13
Detroit Study.
14
DR. KEELER: We are talking about the
15
paper that was submitted to the Board Lynam and Keeler
16
paper. We have done a considerable amount of work in
17
Southeast Michigan over the past 16 years on mercury
18
deposition and sources, and there are actually only a
19
handful of actual coal-fired utilities that are in
20
Southeast Michigan, and these include mineral power
21
plant, which is on Lake Erie, and there are two or three
22
others that are actually even closer to our site, and
23
unfortunately, I'm having a post-afternoon mental lapse
24
here, but there are -- there's only a hand full of
Page150
1
sources that we consider local, and again, those are
2
fairly close, certainly within 50 miles of our site in
3
Detroit.
4
Question 5-C: "Do you know what type
5
of coal was utilized in these power plants during the
6
duration of your study?" I'm not aware of data that
7
provides the actual type of mercury, type of coal that
8
was burned by these power plants on a day-by-day basis,
9
and so I don't have that information, but I do have, in
10
the Michigan Mercury Utility Work Report, which I think
11
is cited somewhere in these documents there is a table
12
listing which plants burned bituminous, which blended
13
bituminous and sub-bituminous, which I believe is most
14
of the plants that were in that five or six that I
15
mentioned were blenders. They used both, but then a few
16
only used sub-bituminous, so that data is available in
17
that report, so I am aware of it but I don't have the
18
day-by-day blending and how much was used of each type
19
and so forth.
20
Question D: "Do you know what type of
21
emissions controls these plants use?" Again, Table E to
22
that Michigan Mercury Electric Work Group provides the
23
mercury -- or the emissions control that's used on each
24
one of those plants. I believe that was utility
Page151
1
provided to the work group.
2
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
3
Q. With the type -- and I think we probably
4
talked about this, but I have the same late afternoon
5
thing you have got going on. Would the type of emission
6
control and the type of coal used affect the chemical
7
signature that you rely on?
8
A. I believe that the signature that we look
9
at can be influenced by the type of control. An example
10
would be if there was no type of particulate control on
11
the source, that would have a profound effect on what
12
came out, in terms of the major trace elements, which
13
most of those are going to be in the particulate form.
14
If there's some type of a scrubber, a wet scrubber, of
15
course, that's going to remove a large degree of the
16
soluble gases, so yes, those things will have an effect
17
on the signatures. The interesting thing is that when
18
you look at the signatures that have been collected over
19
the years, you can see variability in certain elements,
20
and you try to not use those to define your sources, but
21
they do introduce some uncertainty in your profiles and
22
that's one of the reasons why these new models are able
23
to propagate through the uncertainty in the signatures
24
to give you that sense that, okay, what if you're off 10
Page152
1
percent in this element and this sample because of
2
something like a control or because of some other
3
chemical transformation?
4
Q. Is it your expectation that these power
5
plants, at the time you did this study, had no
6
particulate control?
7
A. Oh, no. I'm not aware of other plants out
8
there --
9
Q. I hope not.
10
A. Okay, so, sorry. I asked you a question
11
again. I apologize. No. That's not my expectation. I
12
was giving you an example.
13
Q. Well, the follow-up, if there are, send
14
them my number.
15
DR. KEELER: E: "What other sources
16
of mercury emissions did you identify as being local
17
with respect to the study site?" Detroit is very
18
similar to Southeast Chicago in that it has a very high
19
density of motor vehicle traffic, iron and steel
20
production. There is a municipal waste incinerator
21
about 10 kilometers away from our site. There's oil
22
refining and chemical manufacturing, together with a
23
very large sludge incinerator. Those are the major
24
sources that we identified in that area.
Page153
1
F: "What was your basis for
2
determining that RGM you identified was a result of the
3
local emissions from coal-fired power plants?" The
4
answer I wrote to myself is I'm not sure what you're
5
referring to. If you could maybe point to what you're
6
asking me, I could maybe answer the question.
7
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
8
Q. Sure. On the top of page 3153 in the
9
left-hand column.
10
MR. KIM: Which document?
11
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
12
Q. I'm sorry. We are looking at the Detroit
13
paper. I have another copy, if you need it. I'm
14
looking at page 3153, on the top. It's in the
15
paragraph, "The presence of sulfur dioxide and RGM." Do
16
you see that?
17
A. Yes.
18
Q. The third sentence -- excuse me -- fourth
19
sentence says, "Since, both, RGM and sulfur dioxide are
20
primary emissions, we conclude that this factor
21
describes local emissions of RGM from coal-fired utility
22
proximate to the monitoring site in Detroit."
23
A. So you are asking me what the basis is for
24
that conclusion?
Page154
1
Q. Yes.
2
A. We have five-minute average SO2
3
concentrations, as well as concentrations of NOx, CO,
4
fine particulates, five-minute concentrations of
5
developmental mercury. Hourly concentrations of
6
reactive gas and reactive and particulate mercury
7
together with the onsite meteorological information,
8
plus all the meteorological information that we
9
collected from all the sites from the National Weather
10
Service, and during times when we got transport from the
11
direction of a couple of the larger coal-fired
12
utilities, this is when we saw this SO2-RGM
13
relationship, and it also turned out when we did this
14
analysis that that factor identified the periods when we
15
had that type of specific flow from that source, so it
16
was done through a data analysis of looking at when the
17
spikes of these things occurred together. The Monroe
18
power plant is to the south, southeast of the site.
19
It's one of the larger facilities, and we could see that
20
on occasion at our monitoring site and this was very
21
different than when we saw --
22
Q. I'm sorry. You could see that --
23
A. In the data, and this was different when
24
one looked at the data when we got flow from the island
Page155
1
where the industrial source was coming from the coke
2
oven and iron and steel facility and the sewage sludge
3
incinerator and refineries. It had a very different
4
characteristic to it, so this confirmed in our mind that
5
this analysis, which was done independently, was telling
6
us that this was coming from coal-fired emissions.
7
Q. Not only coal-fired emissions, but
8
coal-fired emissions from a certain facility?
9
A. Again, if I didn't put a facility here, I
10
guess it was not one facility. It could have been from
11
more than one because I think that was more than one
12
episode that we are talking about in that paragraph.
13
Q. So local emissions in that sentence I
14
assume also means this 50 kilometer range that we have
15
been talking about?
16
A. That's right, during one day.
17
Q. And the approximate also refers to that
18
50-kilometer distance?
19
A. Where it's approximate.
20
Q. It says, "Describes local emissions of RGM
21
from coal-fired facility proximate to monitoring site."
22
A. That's right, approximate.
23
Q. Thank you.
24
DR. KEELER: Question No. 6: "Is it
Page156
1
correct that the Steubenville study is designed to be a
2
four-year study and completed in 2006?" No. The study
3
was initially designed and put out on the street as an
4
RFP to be a two-year study. The study has been -- was
5
extended to become a three-year study because of the
6
additional equipment that was given to us, so we
7
requested an additional year of measurement and had
8
been, since then, extended one more year because of the
9
importance of this site, in terms of the results that we
10
were seeing, so now the study is intended to --
11
measurement collection is going to run through 2006.
12
We'll get done collecting data at the end of 2006, and
13
there will probably be a subsequent year of analyzing
14
the samples, doing the analysis and doing the modeling
15
that goes along with that. So originally, it was a
16
two-year study.
17
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
18
Q. When do you -- this is sort of Question B,
19
but we might as well get to it. When do you expect the
20
2005 data to be available for review?
21
A. That is Question B, "Is the data for 2005
22
available for review?" The 2005 database is being built
23
at this time. We are working on the last two quarters
24
of the year. It takes quite a while to analyze all
Page157
1
these different samples because it's not just
2
precipitation aerosol samples we are collecting, as well
3
as the other gaseous data and meteorological data. All
4
that data has to be processed and put together, so we
5
are hoping that the 2005 data will be completed shortly.
6
What does that mean? It's June. We are going to be in
7
the field for the next two months. It's likely not to
8
happen, until the fall, so October-November time frame.
9
Q. Is that going to have to go through a peer
10
review process, as well, or subject to publication, or
11
is that something you expect to be released to the
12
public?
13
A. Our intentions, at this point, are to put
14
all of the data together into a complete analysis of the
15
entire data and submit that for per review. My guess is
16
it will probably go through another exhaustive peer
17
review internally and through EPA, but I don't know that
18
for a fact, so it will be released after that, that
19
process.
20
Q. Thank you.
21
DR. KEELER: "Is it accurate that the
22
information you present in your testimony is based upon
23
the first two years study 2003, 2004?" The answer is
24
yes.
Page158
1
Question 7: "You indicated that you
2
served on a Michigan Electric Utility Work Group, which
3
studied ways to reduce emissions from coal-fired power
4
plants. A: Did you participate in the final draft of
5
the report dated June 20, 2005?" The answer is yes.
6
B: "Did you participate in the
7
drafting of the chapter on mercury emissions and
8
deposition, which is chapter 3.3 on page 50 of the
9
report?" The answer is yes.
10
C: "Do you agree with the statement
11
on page 50 that, `The concern over mercury in the
12
environment stems from its eventual deposition at the
13
earth's surface and subsequent conversion to methylated
14
mercury'"? The answer is yes.
15
D: "Do you agree with the statement
16
on page 56 that `oxidized mercury, or Hg0, that is
17
deposited on the surface of the Great Lakes would not
18
likely enter the reaction pathway that would lead to the
19
production of methylmercury in the lakes; although
20
tributaries and surrounding wetlands would support
21
methylation activities?" I did not write that sentence.
22
For the most part, it's correct, except I believe that
23
there was some type of mistake made in that. I'm not
24
sure that they were correct in their oxidized mercury or
Page159
1
Hg0. I don't know if they meant -- Hg0 is not oxidized
2
mercury, so the statement is factually incorrect as it's
3
written, but the intent of the statement is, for the
4
most part, correct that mercury in, both, the elemental
5
form and in the reactive form that deposits to the Great
6
Lakes water body, itself, is -- some of that mercury is
7
going to evade and come back out, and I think that's the
8
intent of the sentence that was in that report.
9
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
10
Q. Also, the reaction to the methylation
11
reaction pathway is not commonly active in the Great
12
Lakes?
13
A. Yeah. As we discussed earlier, the most
14
of the Great Lakes are oxygenated fairly well down to
15
the -- so there's no methylation that's occurring in
16
that oxygenating water. The big lakes, themselves, are
17
not where the methylation is occurring. The methylation
18
is occurring when that precipitation and pollution
19
deposition hits the forested areas around the Great
20
Lakes and the wetlands, and then the rain washes that
21
pollution off, or the mercury that's in the rain. Then
22
it runs off and goes into the wetlands where it then can
23
subsequently undergo the methylation, and then that runs
24
off into the tributaries, and feeds into the shoreline
Page160
1
of the lakes, but the question is correct. It doesn't
2
happen in the Big Lakes in open water.
3
E: "Why does not the report discuss
4
your work at Steubenville?" As I mentioned before, the
5
work in Steubenville, we were forced to rush and do some
6
of this analysis in the spring of 2005. The mercury
7
work group that I was a part of had started quite a bit
8
earlier than that and had been going on for a long time,
9
and although they were very anxious for us to get this
10
into peer review, and get it out in the literature,
11
there was an understanding that we weren't going to
12
include non-peer-reviewed publications in that report
13
just as a way to be fair across the table, and so that's
14
why it was not included. It was not excluded since I
15
was a member of that work group, I did not exclude my
16
own work because I didn't feel as if it was a good
17
enough quality. It was just that we agreed to these
18
rules, and I lived with them.
19
F: "Do you agree with the statement
20
on page 58 that the results of the Wisconsin Utility
21
Case Study performed by -- I'm sorry I'm not going to
22
butcher your name -- spell it,
23
V-I-J-A-Y-A-R-A-G-H-A-V-E-N, et al., indicated that, on
24
an annual basis, coal-fired utility boilers in Wisconsin
Page161
1
contributed, approximately, one to four percent of the
2
mercury being deposited via precipitation near Wisconsin
3
MDN stations. Do I agree with that statement? I have
4
no basis to agree or disagree with the statement. I'm
5
aware of the work and the report that was done for the
6
Wisconsin utilities. And presented to the mercury work
7
group. I have no reason to doubt the validity of their
8
work, and I would suggest that in the case of Wisconsin
9
utilities seeing that most of their utilities their
10
large utilities are located on the east side of the
11
lake, most of their emissions would tend to belong to
12
the east, and would not be deposited in the
13
precipitation, so it's not inconsistent with my thought,
14
in terms of where precipitation comes from and goes to,
15
in terms of delivering pollutants to the state of
16
Wisconsin, so that's my answer.
17
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Point of
18
clarification, "MDN station" is that monitoring
19
stations?
20
DR. KEELER: MDN refers to the mercury
21
deposition network.
22
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
23
Q. There are power plants other than those
24
along the eastern coast of coal-fired burning power
Page162
1
plants in Wisconsin, other than those along the eastern
2
shore of Lake Michigan, are they not, western shore?
3
A. Yes. I think there are a couple that are
4
also on the southeast side I guess or southwest side,
5
excuse me.
6
DR. KEELER: G: "Do you agree with
7
the statement on pages 60 to 61 that, `the local impact,
8
or potential hot spot, is likely overestimated by
9
Regional 3-D Eulerian models"? I would say, no, I don't
10
agree with that. It really is largely a function of the
11
model, in the parameterizations of that model, so I
12
would tend not to agree with that generalization.
13
Q. So when you say it depends on the model,
14
are there specific models that you think are likely to
15
overestimate local impact?
16
A. Again, I would have to be intimately
17
familiar with the model in order for me to give you an
18
example of one. It would depend on the picture of
19
emission sources that you were looking at and how the
20
model parameters some of its scale processes, and so
21
forth, in order for me to generalize that question.
22
Q. For example, the C-MAQ that's utilized by
23
U.S. EPA.
24
A. If one is asking me the question do I see
Page163
1
instances in modeling output that suggests the C-MAQ
2
overestimates deposition in some places, I would say
3
that, from my experience, that I see C-MAQ
4
underestimating deposition in areas where we have
5
measurements where there's a great deal of mercury, for
6
example, and other places where it overpredicts based on
7
the measurements, so again, I think that's a very
8
difficult generalization to make, and one I would not
9
agree with. I don't think there's a hard and fast rule
10
that you could say that's a correct statement.
11
Q. And do they also be sort of gets into H,
12
that -- would you agree with the statement it's likely
13
to be overestimated by the Team model -- T-E-A-M?
14
A. I am familiar with the Team model through
15
the publications that have been written. I am not,
16
intimately, with the parameterizations in the Team model
17
and how they handle some of those things, so I wouldn't
18
be able to answer, but H: I do agree that C-MAQ and
19
Team are both examples of 3-D Eulerian models, so the
20
answer to that is yes.
21
Q. Do you think that the C-MAQ and Team
22
models are useful for looking at the issue of mercury
23
deposition?
24
A. I'm, both, a modeler and a measurements
Page164
1
person. When one can model a physical process using
2
mathematics and equations, one can confirm that they
3
understand what controls the process. That's what the
4
basis for engineering is. If one can model something,
5
one learns and gains great insights to the physical and
6
chemical processes that are underlining the true
7
physical realities that occur in the environment. As
8
someone who does, both, measurement and models, I am
9
equally what would you say -- I look at both of them
10
with a sense of knowing that both are very uncertain,
11
and that both can be used to collaborate the other.
12
Models are imperfect, and models, especially for
13
something as complex as mercury deposition, are
14
something that, at this point in time, are not to the
15
point where I feel comfortable with using them to --
16
because I don't feel that they do behave and describe
17
the phenomenon that we see in the environment based on
18
our measurements, so models are useful tools, but what
19
you put into the model, the input parameters, how the
20
physical parameterizations are done in the models will
21
have a great impact on the quality of the output that
22
the model has and not all models are created equal. I
23
think that the models that have been published in the
24
peer-reviewed literature have come a long way. I think
Page165
1
that the state of the sciences should be applauded where
2
we are at at this point, but we have a long ways to go,
3
and it's not the modelers problem. It's the other half
4
of me that's trying to describe the physical and
5
chemical reactions that are needed in the models. If I
6
give them the wrong model reaction rates, then they
7
can't model the process properly. If I don't give them
8
the proper speciation in the emissions data, they cannot
9
predict the appropriate deposition downwind. I think
10
the models in terms of their description of meteorology
11
have gotten pretty sophisticated, but the fact remains
12
that it's still a struggle with actually predicting
13
where precipitation falls, if you look at the way that
14
these models predict each event that we sample, so if we
15
compare an event estimate from C-MAQ, or from some other
16
model, we do a poor job because we can't get the
17
precipitation rate amount or the rate correct. We don't
18
get the precipitation falling in the correct location.
19
These are problems that all models have that
20
parameterize meteorological processes.
21
Q. Would the same uncertainty be associated
22
with a source-receptor model?
23
A. All these are source-receptor models.
24
Source-receptor models are, basically, taking some
Page166
1
attribute at a receptor and providing a relationship,
2
how much comes from this source winds up with that
3
receptor, so whether you start at the source, or you
4
start at the receptor, they are both receptor models, so
5
are you asking me are these the same uncertainties in
6
receptor models?
7
Q. I'm asking you whether there are the same
8
uncertainties in the source-receptor model that you
9
identified yourself as performing.
10
A. So the source receptor-modeling that I
11
refer to and that was utilized to come to our
12
conclusions on the portion of coal-fired utilities at
13
Steubenville are receptor models. They are starting
14
from observations at the receptor, and they work
15
backwards, and they do not rely upon understanding the
16
chemical processes that go in the atmosphere. They
17
don't require that you understand the species, exact
18
speciation that occurs at the power plant. They only
19
require that you have a detailed characterization of the
20
measurements at that site, and that's one of the
21
advantages. That's why receptor modeling started
22
because in the early days there were measurements made
23
of particulates in the atmosphere, and we didn't know
24
where that particulates were coming from, and we were
Page167
1
able to identify sources that people didn't even know
2
were there based on using these receptor techniques and
3
working backwards and identifying a source of that
4
particular pollution, so no, they don't have -- they
5
don't suffer from the same uncertainties as the project
6
models would.
7
Q. My recollection is that you testified that
8
the source-receptor -- excuse me -- the receptor models
9
identify are categories of sources, correct?
10
A. I don't understand that question.
11
Q. What the receptor models identify are --
12
is not a specific source, a specific smokestack, for
13
example, but a category of sources, coal-fired power
14
plants?
15
A. Correct.
16
Q. So in order to locate the specific source
17
and identify it's proximity to the receptor, you have to
18
add another step, which involves meteorology, correct?
19
A. Meteorological modeling, correct.
20
Q. Is the meteorological modeling subject to
21
the same uncertainties that you have just described?
22
A. This is the beauty in this analysis that
23
we depend largely on observations in that type of
24
analysis. We do use a model, like the hy-split model
Page168
1
that gives you where the pollution came from. You can
2
start at a receptor and it will tell you where the air
3
came from that arrived at that point in space, and there
4
are uncertainties in that calculation, but we include
5
that in our modeling. We take into account that there's
6
an uncertainty in the upwind pattern. That's something,
7
again, that many of the other researchers that look at
8
this do not include that. They assume that the
9
trajectory is a perfect calculation, but we look at it
10
as a problemistic function, that the trajectory
11
represents the highest probability that pollution would
12
follow that path and propagate a certainty about that
13
analysis.
14
Q. So the uncertainty associated with the
15
meteorologic models that you use in your receptor
16
studies is less than the uncertainty inherent in the
17
C-MAQ or Team modeling?
18
A. It is because it's not part of our results
19
or our conclusion. When we get a result, and this is
20
why, when you keep asking me about the distance scales,
21
what's local versus regional and so forth, is that we
22
don't overinterpret what we're doing, and the scale that
23
we ascribe to that the sources could have been in is a
24
little bit larger than what we would like. We would
Page169
1
like to be able to pinpoint it to a spot, but because
2
there's uncertainty in these calculations, it becomes a
3
little bit blurry, but what's nice is, at the end of the
4
result, we can pinpoint an area like Southwestern Ohio
5
so something the size of an area of a state is the kind
6
of the smallest geographical region that we can
7
identify.
8
Q. When you use the meteorologic models that
9
you described in your receptor modeling, how far back in
10
time or back in distance do they go?
11
A. That varies from study to study and what
12
we're looking at. As one goes farther and father
13
backwards in time, the calculation has greater and
14
greater uncertainty, and one of the things I did as a
15
Greenhorn graduate student over 20 years ago was to
16
actually look at trajectories that went back five and
17
seven days compared to those that went back three days,
18
and look at our ability to predict where the air came
19
from using five-day trajectories, versus three days,
20
versus 24 hours, and what we found was -- and this is
21
actually work we did under the utility acid
22
precipitation project filed by my advisor, Perry Samson,
23
at the University of Michigan who was the principal
24
investigator on that. We actually used the three-day
Page170
1
back trajectories, and found they gave us very, very
2
good information describing the synoptic meteorological
3
conditions pertaining to air mass transport, so through
4
a set of analysis and meteorological tests and so forth,
5
we found that a three-day was the most reliable,
6
although understanding that, of course, air is
7
transported much farther than that, and again, if you
8
were looking at carbon monoxide, or if you are looking
9
at a stable interpollutant that doesn't have any
10
transformations or deposition, then one might select a
11
different approach, but since we are looking at
12
precipitating systems, the choice of a three-day
13
trajectory or five-day trajectory doesn't strongly
14
influence our analysis.
15
Q. What are your assumptions with respect to
16
the amount of mercury in the air, furthest back extent
17
of that meteorologic model?
18
A. We don't make any assumptions about that.
19
There is no inherent assumption about the amount of
20
pollutants going back along the trajectory.
21
Q. Then going back -- what are you measuring
22
back along the trajectory? The air movement?
23
A. Yeah. That's only telling us about the
24
meteorological conditions that occurred upwind.
Page171
1
Q. There's no factor for looking at where --
2
we made these discussions about local and regional
3
sources, which have a radius of about one thousand
4
kilometers, about?
5
A. Yeah.
6
Q. How do you know that the mercury that you
7
assume is from a local-regional source within this
8
thousand kilometer radius circle is from within that
9
circle and not going outside that circle?
10
A. What we will do is we will actually look
11
at the rainfall patterns that occurred -- we will take
12
the meteorological data and look at it. It's kind of a
13
the best way to describe it is you take the 30-minute
14
meteorological data and plot it out on the piece of
15
paper so that the maps that you see and then put it in
16
motion, so you watching it as it's moving through time,
17
and you can actually look and see where the air mass
18
came from, and where it precipitated along the path
19
where the air mass came, and you can look and see where
20
the air was flowing into the storms, and where that
21
storm or that cloud cell actually moved, and then
22
precipitated, and so we do this for each storm that we
23
have data for, and we can work backwards along those to
24
a point where we are confident that we have captured
Page172
1
where that storm started, where the air mass came from
2
and eventually precipitated and aided by NEX-RAD data,
3
together with all the surface meteorological
4
measurements, and this is a very tedious analysis, and
5
it takes a lot of time, as you can well imagine. If
6
you've ever done a meteorological analysis, we still do
7
things the old way where we take out maps and we plot
8
out things by hand and actually put these things
9
together, together with the data that we are collecting,
10
so we can look at the variability, really, as a
11
snapshot. Sometimes we will look at the NEX-RAD data in
12
five-minute intervals and play it like a movie and play
13
it back and look at these snapshots, and in doing that
14
because reactive mercury is a form that's most likely to
15
go into those precipitating systems, together with
16
particulate mercury, we can then know that those
17
emissions had to have come from a point in time in space
18
upwind where they could have been removed at our site,
19
so elemental mercury that was coming from China, for
20
example, takes a very long time to oxidize in the
21
atmosphere, and it can float around and float around and
22
float around, but it takes a long time and converts at a
23
very low rate. If we have a lot of mercury in our
24
sample, it's almost impossible for a mercury that was
Page173
1
emitted, say, use the example of California in the
2
elemental form to have it get to enough where it's going
3
to explain the amount of mercury we found in our
4
deposition sample in Ohio, and so we have an
5
understanding of the chemical conversion, and an
6
understanding of the types of mercury that are emitted,
7
and you can only explain that by looking at sources
8
within a certain vicinity that emit the types of mercury
9
that would go into the solution, and go into clouded
10
water. Of course, I'm oversimplifying this to make sure
11
everyone understands what I'm saying, which I know is
12
fairly difficult, but still, that's the basic
13
taking-apart and dissecting, doing a CSI case on a
14
precipitation event. We are taking all the information
15
that we can and dissecting it, knowing what we have by
16
looking at it over 20 years worth of precipitation data
17
for other species, like sulfate, nitrate, precipitation,
18
and using that to then determine the radius from which
19
these sources could come, and then having over 200
20
precipitation events, you put this ensemble of events,
21
this weight of evidence together, and then paint a
22
picture on the region or area that that mercury could be
23
coming from.
24
Q. Would some portion of the mercury that you
Page174
1
observed at the receptor site come from these more
2
distant sources, or is there an assumption that none of
3
it comes from those distant sources?
4
A. No. We have always stated, although
5
people like to pin you into a box, and say that you
6
don't believe there's any global transport. I've never
7
said that. It's, in fact, we see some 20 percent could
8
be coming from very distant sources beyond the regional
9
scale, so there is going to be global transport. If we
10
are able to knock down emissions to a point where let's
11
just say this rule went into effect, and we were able to
12
take 90 percent of emissions out of coal-fired
13
utilities, that 20 percent signal would become an
14
important one to be worrying about, but that signal is
15
varying over time, but you can see that 20 percent
16
signal if you look at the remote sites to the west where
17
there are no coal-fired utilities. You can look west of
18
the Mississippi, and look to see that the deposition
19
that they incur out there is typically less than 4
20
micrograms per square meter, where we are getting 20 in
21
Steubenville, so you do see that global signal, and it's
22
real, and it's something we are looking on, in terms of
23
getting other nations -- China, India, and other places
24
-- to be concerned about their mercury emissions, as
Page175
1
well.
2
Q. When you use the term "value 20 percent,"
3
that's 20 percent of --
4
A. The observed mercury deposition that we
5
see.
6
Q. The observed mercury deposition. Does
7
your model differentiate between coal-fired utility
8
mercury at different distances within that one thousand
9
kilometer radius circle, say, 1,500?
10
A. Are you asking me about, again, individual
11
plants?
12
Q. Yes.
13
A. No. Because of the uncertainty in the
14
meteorological analysis, we can't differentiate between
15
a plant that's located 15 kilometers from another one in
16
that sphere, so the answer is no.
17
MR. AYRES CONTINUES:
18
Q. Could I jump in with one question at this
19
point? Mr. Rieser has used this thousand kilometer
20
radius several times, and I just wanted to ask the
21
witness if that is the outer limit of what you call
22
"region"?
23
A. Yes. I think that's a good way to think
24
about it. I think that's really, when we are looking at
Page176
1
regional, that thousand kilometers is the outer region.
2
Q. Would it be likely to be smaller
3
throughout?
4
A. In most of the large precipitation events
5
that we see at Steubenville, it's actually much smaller.
6
It's less than 50 kilometers. One of the questions that
7
you asked me earlier and I thought you were going to ask
8
me the same question because I did answer it before was
9
that you asked me would we -- if, in fact, the mercury
10
that was the mercury that we see in the wet deposition
11
could we explain it by emissions of all elemental
12
mercury. If so, if the local power plants were only
13
emitting elemental mercury, could we explain our
14
deposition pattern? The answer is no. So, if all the
15
power plants only put out elemental mercury in the
16
entire region, then we could not explain our data, so
17
that's fairly important, so it really confirms the fact
18
that coal combustion sources are putting out a
19
significant amount of mercury in that reactive,
20
particulate form, and that's consistent with our
21
understanding and thought processes in the atmospheric
22
chemistry.
23
MR. RIESER: Would you read the last
24
part of that answer back, please?
Page177
1
(At which point, the previous answer
2
was read by the court reporter.)
3
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
4
Q. That it's some portion of RGM and some
5
portion is elemental.
6
A. It's not an according to the model at all.
7
It's a confirming a point, in terms of our interpreting
8
our data.
9
Q. In what way?
10
A. Because our understanding of the chemistry
11
of elemental mercury is such that it would not see the
12
large amounts of mercury in the deposition that we see
13
based on just elemental mercury being the form that
14
would be in the precipitating systems that deposit the
15
mercury to Steubenville.
16
Q. In answer to Mr. Ayres' question I think
17
you changed something that you said before with respect
18
to your testimony, so I just need to confirm it. Right
19
at the end of your testimony, you talked about the
20
deposition of mercury having influence by large
21
precipitation and these events are associated with
22
emissions from local and regional sources, and we had a
23
long discussion about how those are defined, and you
24
define them in the meteorologic sense, and it was my
Page178
1
understanding that the combination of local and regional
2
implied the distance that had been using because it was
3
your phrase a thousand kilometers away, and since it can
4
come from anywhere, I'm thinking of a circle of a
5
thousand kilometer radius.
6
A. That's correct.
7
Q. So are you changing that definition of how
8
you're using "local" and "regional" in that sentence of
9
your testimony?
10
A. No. I gave a sub-answer. The answer to
11
that in the testimony is still correct. What I said was
12
that, for a number of the largest events, we determined
13
that they were coming from less than 50 kilometers away.
14
I said -- I did not make the general statement that all
15
of them were coming from less than 50 kilometers away,
16
so my general statement in my testimony is still
17
correct.
18
Q. And how are you able to determine that
19
they were less than 50 kilometers away?
20
A. Again, based on meteorological conditions
21
in those situations, meteorological conditions was such
22
that the transport was very slow, and storms did not
23
move very quickly, and so the spacial extent was very,
24
very isolated.
Page179
1
MR. HARLEY: Madam Hearing Officer,
2
out of deference to my peers who are actually being paid
3
to be here, we've elected to sit at the second table,
4
but I do want to point out that we have appeared at
5
these proceedings, and would be very grateful, even
6
though we are sitting at the second table, if we could
7
get copies of exhibits when they are passed around.
8
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: And I
9
apologize, Mr. Harley. I have not been looking up when
10
that's happening, and we'll see to it that you get
11
exhibits in the future. Keel.
12
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Also, if we do
13
have problems getting copies of things, the EPA I know
14
has a copier here, as do we. We can get copies.
15
MR. KIM: We will make sure we have
16
copies for, at the very least, Mr. Harley.
17
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: With that, I
18
think we are ready to begin with the questioning again.
19
Are we ready for 7-H?
20
DR. KEELER: I answered 7-H.
21
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
22
Q. I just have a couple. Is it your
23
understanding or belief from the data that you got that
24
this Steubenville the utilities that, say, within 50
Page180
1
kilometers of Steubenville are putting out -- are
2
emitting large amounts of RGM?
3
A. So you combined a number of statements
4
that I made into a new statement, which doesn't really
5
express what I said in the several independent
6
statements. A, the 50 kilometers was pertaining to a
7
different point, referring to a couple of the largest
8
precipitation events, and the second part of your
9
combined sentence was do I feel like there's a large
10
amount of RGM coming out of the power plants. That was
11
another statement in which I said we couldn't -- we
12
couldn't explain the large amount of mercury deposition
13
we see in our precipitation events based on local and
14
regional power facilities putting out all elements of
15
mercury that they had to have been putting out reactive
16
mercury for us to see that. I can't quantify the amount
17
of reactive mercury, but I did say that it was a
18
substantial amount of their emissions had to have been
19
in the reactive mercury form, so just to clarify, so I
20
didn't put those things together.
21
Q. Following up on that, you talked about a
22
20 percent global mercury I think was the phrase. Is
23
that correct?
24
A. 20 percent that came from --
Page181
1
Q. Global sources?
2
A. From distances greater than the regional
3
scale, let's say.
4
Q. How did you arrive at that number?
5
A. Well, A, that was, approximately, the
6
difference in my -- it really is a difference, if you
7
begin looking at the amount of deposition at sites that
8
are west of the Mississippi, and at periods where we get
9
what I would call -- I call them clean air sectors or
10
transports from directions where there aren't a lot of
11
sources. We get fairly low deposition amounts and
12
because we don't see strong tracer signals from those
13
precipitation samples and we get transport from, say,
14
the northwest out of Canada, but we still see some
15
mercury. It appears to me that that's something that
16
could be from oxidation of mercury that was transported
17
over long distances, so the absence of strong tracers in
18
this small amount of mercury almost always is visible in
19
this very small mercury events, and that's where I kind
20
of have a sense for 20.
21
Again, I didn't mean to be
22
quantitative that the 20 percent is our estimate at
23
Steubenville. That's not what I said. I said there
24
could be something on the order of 20 percent
Page182
1
contributing to a background over the Great Lakes
2
region. But again, the importance of that background is
3
going to vary over a time period. Clearly, that's a
4
small signal in Steubenville compared to what we see
5
from the local coal-fired utilities compared to the
6
local and regional utilities.
7
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: You need to
8
identify yourself.
9
MR. RIESER: Let's go on to eight,
10
please.
11
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Mr. Zabel and
12
then Mr. Harley.
13
MR. ZABEL CONTINUES:
14
Q. Before we go on to eight, Dr. Keeler, I
15
can follow this at all. You have a monitoring station
16
at which you take a sample. You analyze that sample for
17
mercury. I'm talking about Steubenville now.
18
A. The precipitation source assessment?
19
Q. Yes.
20
A. Yes. We collect precipitation samples,
21
and we analyze those samples for mercury, a suite
22
(phonetic) of trace elements and major ions.
23
Q. Just somewhat of an aside, is that total
24
mercury?
Page183
1
A. It is total mercury.
2
Q. And you analyze it, as you said, for the
3
trace elements that, I assume, have been fingerprinted
4
to specific source types. Is that correct?
5
A. I'm sorry. I don't understand your
6
question.
7
Q. Earlier you talked about fingerprinting
8
specific source types.
9
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: I think he
10
used the word "signature."
11
DR. KEELER: That's fine, source
12
signature, same thing.
13
Q. Specific source types by trace elements.
14
Is that correct?
15
A. That's correct.
16
Q. So you now analyze the sample for the
17
mercury content and the trace element content. Is it
18
through that trace element and your model that you
19
allocate the quantity of mercury among those source
20
types?
21
A. It's all of the chemical composition, the
22
major ions, the elemental composition, and the mercury,
23
and the PMF, or unmixed models that deconvolute this
24
sample's contributions back to the sources that
Page184
1
contributed, yes.
2
Q. So whatever algorithm you've got built
3
into that model will say X percentage of that came from
4
coal-fired power plants. Is that correct?
5
A. It identifies the source which then we use
6
our understanding of the chemical signatures to identify
7
that source, yes.
8
Q. What do you do with that global portion
9
that you mentioned a moment ago?
10
A. Well, the global portion is usually in the
11
unexplained category.
12
Q. How big is the unexplained category?
13
A. In this case, that's where I got the 20
14
percent factor.
15
Q. I guess what -- and maybe this is built
16
into the trace element analysis is you've got an
17
analysis of all those other elements to a apportion the
18
mercury. Why don't you apportion 100 percent of it?
19
A. You can only apportion the amount of
20
mercury that has a relationship with these other
21
elements, so if there are -- so if the case -- if, in
22
fact, it's a mercury form that was chemically
23
transformed in the atmosphere, just been floating around
24
and other trace elements which were there were removed,
Page185
1
so it's just this gaseous elemental mercury that's
2
floating around the earth, and then it chemically gets
3
transformed because it gets removed, it would not have
4
the same tracer to go with it, so therefore, it would
5
not be able to -- the model would not statistically be
6
able to separate it out as a new factor, so basically,
7
it gets in the unexplained category.
8
Q. I guess I'm having trouble getting around
9
the unexplained category, Doctor.
10
A. If you think about in terms of a
11
regression analysis, when you do a regression, and you
12
can explain your R squared is .86. it tells you that 14
13
percent of the variance in your data is unexplained.
14
That's what I'm trying to say.
15
Q. Now I understand. Thank you.
16
MR. HARLEY CONTINUES:
17
Q. Based on your testimony, I feel very bad
18
for Steubenville, Ohio. I'm not sure. That's my
19
question. In your opinion, is there any reason to
20
believe there is a disproportionate or preferential
21
mercury deposition on Steubenville, Ohio, by comparison
22
to other similarly situated towns?
23
A. No. There is nothing unique about
24
Steubenville, Ohio, that would make it stand out or be
Page186
1
unique, in terms of it receiving some unusual amount of
2
mercury deposition. The quantity of deposition that's
3
received there is really a function of its geographical
4
location in the United States. The fact that the
5
precipitation and the storms that bring the
6
precipitation have an orientation that go from the
7
south, southwest, up to the Steubenville location, and
8
then right now, it's all of those factors taken
9
together. The high density of emissions, together with
10
the way that the storm tracks -- storm tracks follow
11
that makes Steubenville a place that receives high
12
mercury deposition. There's nothing in particular or
13
special about it.
14
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Ready to move
15
on to question eight? Mr. Bonebrake.
16
MR. BONEBRAKE CONTINUES:
17
Q. One follow-up. The 20 percent unexplained
18
portion that you were just discussing with Mr. Zabel, is
19
that all the positive is RGM?
20
A. I'm sorry. I must not be making myself
21
clear, then. The 20 percent we were talking about was
22
in reference to precipitation deposition. We were
23
talking about an unexplained amount of mercury that was
24
in the deposition that we can't account, in terms of
Page187
1
saying, "It came from this source or that source."
2
Partly, that's because of the uncertainty in the
3
calculations and everything else, but it doesn't
4
really -- I can't say that it's related to RGM or that
5
it's in an RGM form, or anything like that, so I think I
6
confused you somehow.
7
Q. So but that 20 percent portion you don't
8
know of what type of mercury is comprised?
9
A. That's total mercury assessment, so the
10
total amount of mercury that's in the precipitation
11
sample 80 percent of it we can explain and 20 percent of
12
it we can't.
13
Q. I understand that what I'm --
14
A. I mean, most of it is going to be in the
15
oxidized form. When we do that type of analysis where
16
we speciate the mercury from just a total mercury to
17
whether it's particulate or dissolved or reactive we
18
wind up getting a predominantly larger amount of
19
oxidized mercury in that sample. It will be 70 to 80
20
percent oxidized mercury. Some of it is particulate,
21
but we don't put much credence in that because, in order
22
to really get at the specific numbers -- and that's not
23
in the paper, and has no bearing on the calculations.
24
It doesn't come into account at all. It's just that
Page188
1
sample is not taken in the way to be able to look at
2
that number, specifically, and it's not important to us,
3
but it does wind up being in an oxidized mercury form in
4
the rain, so question 8 --
5
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
6
Q. Just as a follow-up on Mr. Harley's
7
question, this is question is asked later, but I think
8
it makes sense to ask it here.
9
MADAM HEARING OFFICER: Could you
10
identify what question it is later, so we can mark it
11
off the list, please.
12
MR. RIESER: This would be 13 A and B,
13
"How many coal-fired power generating units are located
14
within 50 miles of Steubenville and what is the combined
15
capacity in megawatts of these units?" These are the
16
questions.
17
DR. KEELER: Again, the information I
18
have available to me, or whatever, is the information I
19
would have to go to the website and pull it off from EPA
20
from the 1999 ICR. I mean, I have got that information
21
back in my lab, but -- it wasn't pertinent, in terms of
22
defining my conclusions, or whatever. We used that
23
information, and we have -- I can provide you with a
24
map, if you would like, that shows the sources as
Page189
1
provided by EPA, but the megawatt capacity and so forth,
2
I don't have that.
3
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
4
Q. It wasn't important to your study?
5
A. It wasn't important in this -- obviously,
6
it is important, in terms of those plants are emitting
7
mercury, but it's not important, in terms of the
8
conclusions that I drew because I don't look at
9
individual plant information at all. In the modeling
10
studies that I do, I don't need that information for
11
receptor modeling, you need that for deterministic
12
models.
13
DR. KEELER: Question 8: "On page 81,
14
the TSD states that you suggest `the lifetime of
15
elemental mercury in the atmosphere is likely much
16
stronger than previously believed.'"
17
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
18
Q. That should be "shorter."
19
A. Because my answer was no, that's not an
20
accurate statement of my testimony.
21
Q. Fair enough.
22
A. So the question should be it's likely much
23
shorter than previously believed?
24
Q. Correct. Is that an accurate statement?
Page190
1
A. Yes. I believe it is an accurate
2
statement. B: "What is the basis for that statement?"
3
One of the biggest uncertainties in all of the mercury
4
modeling and to understanding mercury chemistry at this
5
point is the rates of reaction for mercury in the
6
atmosphere. We learned through work that our colleagues
7
have done in the Arctic that elemental mercury can very
8
rapidly on a time frame of almost instantaneously react
9
with atmospheric halogens, bromine and chlorine in the
10
atmosphere to transform the elemental mercury to
11
reactive mercury and deposit to the surface of the snow
12
pack in such a way that all the elemental mercury is
13
depleted from the air over the course of hours. It's a
14
very interesting phenomenon that occurs at Arctic
15
sunrise. This really got the mercury world shook up
16
because it was something that we hadn't anticipated.
17
Most of the work that had been done prior to that
18
suggested that mercury chemistry was really slow, that
19
it would take days and days for you to oxidize mercury
20
and convert it from one form to another. Over the past
21
several years, we have learned that we have a poor
22
understanding of the mercury chemistry, that we don't
23
understand what chemicals and what compounds are
24
oxidizing mercury, and through the work of a large
Page191
1
number of scientists, we now know that mercury can
2
transform to the atmosphere from one form to the other.
3
It can be both oxidized and can be reduced and that
4
chemistry suggests that, in certain environments, such
5
as downwind of urban areas, that you can actually get
6
rapid oxidation of the mercury. By "rapid" there I
7
don't mean like in the Arctic, instantaneous. I mean
8
over the course of hours. In the same type of time
9
frame that is introduced in regional transport, you can
10
get transformation of elemental mercury to reactive
11
mercury, and so that would then shorten up the lifetime
12
of mercury in the atmosphere and that's the basis for my
13
statement.
14
Q. Has that phenomenon been observed anywhere
15
other than in the Arctic or marine-boundary
16
environments?
17
A. The phenomenon with the halogens is
18
something that has not been documented anywhere, but in
19
the Arctic, and in some cases, in the marine boundary
20
layer. We have not seen it in the marine boundary
21
layer, by the way. We have made our own measurements
22
and don't see that phenomenon, but others claim that
23
they do, but that's -- the reason for that is it's
24
associated with the Arctic sunrise. The whole winter
Page192
1
it's dark. The chemicals build up in the snow and ice.
2
The sun comes out, and all those chemicals get released.
3
It's a rapid explosion of all these chemical reactions
4
together with the ice that's there, so that's a very
5
different phenomenon. We do see in Michigan at our
6
sites and in Steubenville evidence of atmospheric
7
chemistry taking place where elemental mercury is
8
changing into reactive mercury, so we have observational
9
evidence of this happening, and we're in the process of
10
trying to define that better by improving our models, so
11
we can describe that, but it's something that is fairly
12
new, and not everyone has included those processes in
13
their models.
14
Q. Are reductions happening, as well, from
15
that?
16
A. Yes, they do. Reduction does occur. It
17
occurs in cloud water, and it's thought to occur in
18
other situations, as well, although we have not seen
19
those -- or those reduction reactions occur in our
20
observational studies, but we do see reduction occurring
21
in cloud water, and it's fairly important reaction in
22
terms of our cloud chemistry.
23
Q. Thank you.
24
DR. KEELER: Question 9 I think. "In
Page193
1
your testimony you discuss the U.S. EPA's there's a --
2
C-MAQ model to determine the impact of domestic mercury
3
sources on atmospheric mercury deposition. A: Are you
4
familiar with the Team model used to perform some of the
5
model Michigan report?" Yes. B: "Do your comments
6
regarding C-MAQ also apply to Team?" Could you be
7
specific about what comments you are referring to?
8
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
9
Q. The comments with respect to its
10
uncertainties.
11
A. Yes. My comments are the same. I would
12
say that all Eulerian deterministic source oriented
13
models suffer from similar large uncertainties due to
14
the fact that they, A, don't adequately describe the
15
physical and chemical processes that control the
16
behavior of mercury in the atmosphere or the
17
interactions of mercury with the surface of the earth,
18
so I would say that they are all equally uncertain -- I
19
shouldn't say they are equally uncertain. They all
20
share in that large uncertainty an inability to model
21
mercury transport and fate.
22
Q. Is that a larger uncertainty than other
23
deterministic models, for example, the model used in the
24
Everglades?
Page194
1
A. No. I would say that the uncertainties in
2
all of these models are quite large, and again, models
3
are a tool, and you use the tool that you have at your
4
disposal, and when we did the work in the Everglades,
5
the model that we used was, at that time, the best
6
developed tool that we had. If we were to go back and
7
redo that analysis, we would have used a more
8
sophisticated tool, and redo that in a different, so
9
they are all very uncertain. What we know now that we
10
didn't know then is that we were really off in our
11
understanding of atmospheric chemistry.
12
Q. You didn't know that at the time of the
13
Everglades?
14
A. At the Everglades, yes.
15
Q. What ways were you off, in terms of the --
16
A. We really didn't understand the complexity
17
in the mercury chemistry at that time. We felt that the
18
reaction ratings were slow enough where chemistry wasn't
19
important. We didn't consider vertical redistribution
20
of mercury in ways where I think we should have. So
21
there's lot of uncertainties we have learned a lot over
22
the last 10 to 12 years that made me feel even more
23
uncertain about where we are at with the modeling.
24
Q. The C-MAQ model has been through several
Page195
1
versions and several episodes of peer review, has it
2
not?
3
A. I don't know that that's correct. To my
4
knowledge, unlike the receptor models, which have been
5
through exhaustive peer review, and so forth, C-MAQ, to
6
my knowledge, has been part of several inner
7
comparisons, but I do not believe that it has undergone
8
the same Agency verification and validation that, let's
9
say, that the RATA (phonetic) model did back in the acid
10
rain days.
11
MR. BONEBRAKE CONTINUES:
12
Q. You mentioned that you had some concerns
13
about uncertainties in the model used in the Florida
14
Study. Also, that you had acquired some additional
15
knowledge pertaining to some of the factors related to
16
that model, Dr. Keeler?
17
A. I'm sorry. I apologize. Could you re-ask
18
the question.
19
(At which point, the prior question
20
was read by the court reporter.)
21
DR. KEELER: I don't have concerns
22
over the use of the model, or in fact, if I went back, I
23
don't think I would change any of my conclusions based
24
on what I know now. I would just use a different model,
Page196
1
knowing the uncertainties of the chemistry are as large
2
as they are.
3
Q. Those uncertainties in chemistry, if you
4
were to re-run if same -- use the same model and re-run
5
the model, but would you change some inputs to the model
6
based on the additional information you have available
7
to you today?
8
A. Actually, I made that statement trying to
9
make the point that we have a -- we have increased our
10
understanding of the chemistry tremendously to the point
11
that, to apply a model such as that one anymore, would
12
not be the best model choice. It turns out, because
13
almost all the mercury that was emitted from the
14
incinerators came out in the reactive form, and the
15
reduction reactions that we understand that are
16
important in cloud, really don't -- wouldn't cause us to
17
change our answers at all, that, in fact, the modeling
18
we did in Florida probably would stand up pretty well.
19
If we were to re-do it, we wouldn't have to re-do much.
20
The things that we know now are much more important, in
21
terms of looking at the super long range, so global
22
redistribution, and really looking downwind of major
23
urban areas, so regional oxygen chemistry, which again,
24
Florida does not have very high oxygen levels. The
Page197
1
levels of ozone are extremely low, for the most part, in
2
South Florida.
3
Q. If I understand that correctly, you are
4
saying the uncertainties you talked about are related
5
primarily to global transport issues?
6
A. Global transport and urban chemistry type
7
reaction.
8
Q. Doesn't global transport have an impact on
9
local deposition?
10
A. Doesn't global transport have an impact on
11
local deposition? I'm not sure why you would call it --
12
does global transport have an impact on deposition
13
everywhere? Is that what you're asking me?
14
Q. At any particular location, some portion
15
of what's being deposited at that location may be
16
derived from a source outside of the region, as you have
17
described it, right?
18
A. Every place that you have mercury there is
19
a probability that some of that mercury came from an
20
area that you would say is not in the local or regional
21
area surrounding that site, and that mercury could have
22
come from a source that was located on the other side of
23
the globe, or it could have come from a molecule of
24
mercury that was emitted from a plant down the road that
Page198
1
went around the globe once, and got reemitted and came
2
back, and we can't differentiate that mercury, so the
3
global pool is a combination of mercury that was emitted
4
by our sources, our coal-fired utilities, our
5
incinerators, as well as those that were emitted from
6
Chinese power plants and incinerators, and no, I cannot
7
rule out any one location. Some mercury is part of that
8
reemission or long range transport of emissions from
9
some place else.
10
DR. KEELER: Question C: "Are you
11
aware of whether the Team results have been validated
12
against MDN data." It's not typical for one researcher
13
to look into the validation of someone else's use of
14
their own model. When one uses the model, or one
15
develops their own modeling application, we try to
16
validate our own work, and so I'm not intimately aware
17
of what validation has been done by the Team model. I
18
have read the peer-reviewed literature papers that have
19
been published on the Team model. The word "validate"
20
means different things to different people, and showing
21
a comparison of predicted wet deposition versus MDN wet
22
deposition, to me, is not validation. It's a
23
comparison, so but that doesn't mean that that model
24
hasn't been validated. I'm not aware of any validation
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of that model, but it may or may not have been.
2
Q. Why would that the constitute a
3
validation?
4
A. "Validation" has a very specific meaning
5
when it comes to models, and in comparison of one part
6
of the model, output is not validation. Validation
7
suggests that you have compared the basic mechanisms and
8
processes in the model in a way that you can point to
9
real observations, and say that the model
10
subparameterizations are replicating reality. I can run
11
a model that will just use precipitation amount, and
12
predict with the same R squared the amount of mercury
13
deposition that you could get at almost any spot and you
14
could say, "Gee, I got the supermodel, and there's my
15
comparison, so I validated it," but to me, I'm not
16
describing anything. I'm just doing a statistical
17
explanation, so if you look in the model in literature,
18
and look at where models are actually validated, which
19
means you take the same input data and same emissions
20
data and same meteorological data, and you run models,
21
and you have various checks that you can make on the
22
model output at various steps to verify and validate
23
that the model is actually doing what you think it is
24
doing. That's a validation process, and again, the
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model might have been validated. I have read the
2
peer-reviewed literature papers, and I have no basis of
3
knowing whether a validation was done or not.
4
DR. KEELER: D: "Are the
5
uncertainties" -- I already identified that -- answered
6
that one. D is no.
7
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
8
Q. Are there difference levels of uncertainty
9
between the two?
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A. Between C-MAQ and Team? Is that --
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Q. No, between the receptor study and the
12
C-MAQ model?
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A. Are there different levels of uncertainty?
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I would say yes.
15
Q. In what way?
16
A. Again, understanding that I'm wearing two
17
hats. I'm the modeler and a measurement person, so I
18
don't want to criticize myself. I'm going to criticize
19
the other side, so I'm not trying to pick on one, versus
20
the other. In order to be able to model from a source
21
perspective, the fate and transport and deposition of a
22
pollutant, one needs to understand all of the processes
23
one has to understand the emissions, in terms of the
24
speciation; one has to understand the chemistry; one has
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to understand the processing of the mercury and the
2
clouds; and one has to understand how the gas molecules
3
are interacting with the surface, all of this. That's a
4
lot of science. There's a lot there, and based on my
5
measurements, I would say that the uncertainties and our
6
ability to define the rates of chemical reaction of
7
mercury in the atmosphere and the rates of deposition of
8
mercury in the atmosphere, those uncertainties are much
9
greater than the uncertainties in our measurement
10
capabilities, much greater. I mean I would say that
11
borders a magnitude greater in source modeling than we
12
are in receptor modeling, so the two are completely
13
different.
14
Q. When you talk about the source modeling,
15
that includes the component that involves the
16
meteorologic model. Is that what you are doing?
17
A. No. Source modeling is C-MAQ and Team --
18
Q. I'm sorry, receptor modeling. I misspoke
19
A. No. When you are talking about
20
meteorologic modeling, again, we are using meteorologic
21
observations to do that. Trajectory modeling has
22
inherent it an uncertainty based on the time resolution
23
and the spacial resolution of the data that's collected
24
from the National Weather Service, and that uncertainty
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1
is fairly well documented. People have been attacking
2
trajectory modeling for 25 years, so there's pretty good
3
literature describing biases and uncertainties in
4
trajectory calculations and how they would affect
5
prediction models.
6
Q. Does your receptor model account for the
7
non-linear transformations between the different forms
8
of mercury in the atmosphere between the source and
9
receptor?
10
A. The PMF and unmixed models do not have a
11
chemical transformation term in them. So they don't
12
take into account transformations, so that if there was
13
some phenomenon that one could come up with, which,
14
basically, what we do is we try to understand is there
15
some non-linear relationship that could occur and how
16
would that effect it, and in doing that analysis, if you
17
could come up with something that you could say would be
18
non-linear relationship you would have to figure out how
19
that would impact the relationship of the data at your
20
site, and that's inherent in the uncertainty analysis
21
that we do, but no, the models do not take into account
22
uncertainty -- or I mean, non-linear transformations.
23
DR. KEELER: Question E: "Can the
24
source receptor approach be used to predict the impact
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1
of different regulatory approaches on mercury
2
deposition?" Not directly. Unlike a source model where
3
you can vary the emissions in the inventory, and say,
4
let's cut mercury emissions from some sector, and then
5
re-run the model, and then see what the difference is.
6
Receptor modeling only takes the observed results and
7
works backwards for telling you how much came from each
8
source sector, but it is -- it's a linear process, so
9
that you could say, if you were to cut mercury emissions
10
from that source, that it would a commensurate impact,
11
in terms of the contributions to the sample in that --
12
at that site, so it doesn't allow you to prognosticate.
13
You can't look into the future. I can't model 20/20,
14
for example, using a receptor modeling approach.
15
Question F: "In using the source
16
receptor approach, do you typically attempt to correlate
17
your results with findings from available atmospheric
18
deposition modeling?" Because we're using observations,
19
and working backwards to come up with a source, we do
20
try to go out and look at whether anyone else has
21
predicted source-receptor relationships to see how well
22
we are doing. In the case of all of our studies, we,
23
generally, try to do that. With mercury now, there are
24
more predictions coming out, but in the past, there
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haven't been all that many, but yes, we do.
2
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
3
Q. Have you done that with respect to
4
Steubenville?
5
A. Only in the respect that we did make a
6
comparison with what -- the results that were put
7
together by U.S. EPA using their CMAQ model.
8
Q. What was the result of that comparison?
9
A. The CMAQ model, which went into the CAMR
10
rule modeling, found that, for Steubenville, coal-fired
11
utility boilers contributed 43 percent of the mercury
12
deposition in the grid square where Steubenville is, and
13
the grid square was a 36-kilometer grid square, so 36 by
14
36 kilometers, so that number is an average of that grid
15
square. The only thing, and the biggest caveat here is
16
that those results were for the calendar year 2001. The
17
results that I have quoted here today were for our
18
modeling for the years 2003-2004, so it's really
19
comparing apples and arranges, but to get a sense for
20
how well CMAQ was doing, we made that comparison, so you
21
can't directly compare the 43 percent from the CMAQ
22
model to what we did because it's different years, and
23
the meteorology is very, very different, and since we
24
saw 13.2, or whatever it was in 2003, and 19.8 in 2004,
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that there's a significant big uncertainty just from one
2
year to another, so comparing apples to oranges isn't a
3
good idea, but that's the only data that was available.
4
Q. Is there an uncertainty factor associated
5
with the 70 percent number that you have talked about
6
with respect to Steubenville?
7
A. What's the uncertainty number?
8
Q. We'll leave that for later.
9
DR. KEELER: G: "What steps have you
10
taken to evaluate the accuracy of the Steubenville
11
results?" As I mentioned earlier, one of the strengths
12
of our study really has been the extensive peer review
13
that was completed by EPA in its external reviewers. As
14
I mentioned, we provided the raw data and the models to
15
the external reviewers to re-run the models, and to use
16
whatever other tools they had at their disposal to
17
evaluate the conclusions and the raw quantitative
18
answers that we gave, and when we were given back those
19
results, and when they gave us our report, they,
20
basically, confirmed our numbers and said that these
21
were very solid, robust answers. The conclusions that
22
we got were very strong, and I would say that's a very
23
strong indication of the quality and accuracy of the
24
work that we are doing. Also, I should say, in terms of
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1
evaluating the accuracy of the predictions, one of the
2
things we did is we went and looked at, again, the EPA
3
emissions inventory for, basically, for the whole
4
Midwest going from east of the Mississippi, and if you
5
look at that emissions database, and look at what is
6
burning coal and where in the greater vicinity, almost
7
all of the coal burned in the Midwest -- I don't
8
remember the exact figure, but a large majority of it is
9
burned by utility boilers, which again, kind of goes
10
along with the answers that we found from our receptor
11
modeling.
12
Q. I'm sorry. When you use the term
13
"vicinity" that --
14
A. Like I said, east of the Mississippi.
15
Q. The peer review, that's external to the
16
EPA. Is that a specific body, like the NAS, or somebody
17
like that?
18
A. EPA hired a contractor to ask for
19
independent review from three independent scientists who
20
felt they had the qualifications. I wasn't involved in
21
that. I have no idea how they went through the
22
selection process. None of the EPA people that were
23
involved in that study were involved in that peer review
24
section. I had no control over that, so these were
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1
independent scientists who had modeling measurement and
2
source-receptor relationship qualifications.
3
DR. KEELER: Question H: "Are there
4
any studies that evaluate source-receptor studies?" I
5
think I mentioned before the EPA has been involved in a
6
number of, basically, model innercomparisons and
7
evaluations for the receptor models over the last 15
8
years, and those are documented in the peer review
9
literature, and yes, there are plenty of those, and
10
there's also been a lot of work being done as far as the
11
receptor modeling developed by EPA.
12
MR. RIESER CONTINUES:
13
Q. But it's accurate that those prior
14
receptor models didn't address mercury, correct?
15
A. Some of them did.
16
Q. Which ones?
17
A. I'm trying to think now. I think the
18
Hopke Group applied PMF, I think it was, looking at -- I
19
think it was mercury, and he also applied a
20
trajectory-based approach -- PSCF I think it's called --
21
applied to mercury measurements that they made in New
22
York.
23
Q. Do you know when those were performed?
24
A. I, honestly, don't recall.
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MADAM HEARING OFFICER: I think we'll
2
-- five o'clock has arrived. We have finished -- we're
3
at Question No. 10.
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Page209
1
STATE OF ILLINOIS)
2
COUNTY OF ST. CLAIR)SS
3
4
I, Holly A. Schmid, a Notary Public in
5
and for the County of Williamson, DO HEREBY CERTIFY that
6
pursuant to agreement between counsel there appeared
7
before me on June 16 and 17, 2006, at the office of the
8
Illinois Pollution Control Board, Springfield, Illinois,
9
Dr. Gerald Keeler, who was first duly sworn by me to
10
testify the whole truth of his knowledge touching upon
11
the matter in controversy aforesaid so far as he should
12
be examined and his examination was taken by me in
13
shorthand and afterwards transcribed upon the typewriter
14
(but not signed by the deponent, and said testimony is
15
herewith returned.
16
IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set
17
my hand and affixed my Notarial Seal this 25th day of
18
June, 2006.
19
__________________________
20
HOLLY A. SCHMID
21
Notary Public -- CSR
22
084-98-254587
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