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Bipartisan Senate, House Bills Introduced To Strengthen Nutrient Credit Trading Program
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Sen. Pat Vance (R-Cumberland) and Rep. Eugene DePasquale (D-York) this week announced the introduction of legislation to strengthen Pennsylvania's nutrient credit trading policy.
 
The PA Fair Share for Clean Water Coalition applauded the bipartisan legislation saying it would help reduce the cost of complying with Chesapeake Bay and watershed cleanup requirements of the federal Clean Water Act and allow for future economic development and job creation in a large portion of Pennsylvania.
 
Senate Bill 767 and House Bill 1213 establish authority for the nutrient credit trading program in statute and require its formation through the regulatory process, to allow stakeholders to have more input into its design. The bills also create a state board that would be authorized to serve as a clearinghouse for the purchase and sale of credits as a supplement to direct exchanges between buyers and sellers.
 
The Department of Environmental Protection currently maintains a nutrient credit trading program; however, it exists only as a department policy.
 
"Ratepayers ultimately benefit from the availability of alternatives to costly facility upgrades," Sen. Vance said. "One of the barriers to a successful nutrient trading program is uncertainty. If farmers are uncertain about the market for credits, they will not make the investments necessary to create them. Municipal authorities cannot make plans to use credits in place of wastewater treatment plant capital upgrades unless they are sure the credits will be available when they are needed."
 
"Nutrient credit trading holds promise as a cost-effective way to meet the mandated nutrient reduction targets," Rep. DePasquale said. "However, the promise has not yet been fulfilled on a wide scale. Our legislation proposes reforms that will improve the program and help us to address the water quality of the Chesapeake Bay."
 
In 2005 the governor unveiled the Chesapeake Bay Tributary Strategy to detail how Pennsylvania will fulfill its responsibilities under the Chesapeake 2000 agreement, which included the Environmental Protection Agency, the states of Maryland, Pennsylvania and Virginia, and the District of Columbia. The agreement outlined a commitment to meet federal water quality standards and remove the Chesapeake Bay from the list impaired waters under the Clean Water Act.
 
Nutrient credit trading allows farmers to get credit for the establishment of conservation practices that reduce runoff of nutrients. Those credits can then be sold to municipal authorities and other entities that are required to meet nutrient reduction targets. A viable trading program gives entities a choice of whether to pursue facility upgrades or purchase credits to meet new discharge limits for nitrogen and phosphorus resulting from implementation of the CBTS.
 
Support for Bills - Clean Water Coalition
 
"Wastewater plants, farmers and developers must reduce nutrients and sediment flowing into our rivers and streams by millions of pounds to meet federal Chesapeake Bay cleanup requirements," said Matthew Ehrhart, Pennsylvania Office Director of the Chesapeake Bay Foundation. "Sen. Vance and Rep. DePasquale are to be congratulated for introducing legislation which will provide a stronger mechanism allowing farmers to install conservation practices and sell the resulting clean water benefits to others and for promoting cost-effective solutions to our water quality problems."
 
"Without the ability to trade nutrient credits, future development in the Chesapeake Bay and other watersheds will be severely limited because nutrient discharges are capped," said Robert J. Fisher of the Pennsylvania Builders Association. "Nutrient trading holds significant promise for bringing down the cost of accommodating future economic growth because it relies on often less expensive measures-- farm conservation practices-- to reduce nutrient runoff. This is really a no-cost stimulus measure for the economy."
 
"Pennsylvania farmers take environmental stewardship seriously and have already made significant progress in reducing nutrient and sediment runoff," said Joel Rotz, Pennsylvania Farm Bureau. "In addition to restoring farm conservation funding in the state budget, the Farm Bureau sees nutrient credit trading and the improvements outlined in the Vance/DePasquale legislation as a way for farmers to get financial support for installing needed conservation practices."
 
"With a limited amount of state and federal funding to help cover Chesapeake Bay upgrades at sewage treatment plants, it is imperative to have a viable nutrient credit trading program as an additional option," said John Brosious, Pennsylvania Municipal Authorities Association. "The nutrient credit trading legislation introduced this week to strengthen the trading system would give us another potentially less expensive way of meeting these nutrient reduction mandates."
 
"Conservation districts have helped farmers generate over 87,000 pounds of nutrient credits from farm conservation projects, but we've had difficulty marketing those credits" said Susan Marquart, Executive Director Pennsylvania Association of Conservation Districts. "The DePasquale/Vance legislation will help these farmers provide a ready market for the credits and help pay for the practices they install."
 
More than 40 farm, business, environmental and sportsmen's groups support the Pennsylvania Fair Share for Clean Water Coalition, which includes the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, Pennsylvania Farm Bureau, Pennsylvania Builders Association, Pennsylvania Municipal Authorities Association and the Pennsylvania Association of Conservation Districts.
 
 

4/10/2009

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