Close Menu
FishonlineFishonline
  • Homepage
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • About
  • TOS
  • Seafood
  • News
  • Trending
  • Travel
What's Hot

Why Norway Has Quietly Become the World’s Most Exciting Destination for Serious Seafood Travellers

June 15, 2026

The EPA Just Repealed Power Plant Regulations That Were Reducing Mercury Levels in American Fish. Scientists Are Alarmed

June 15, 2026

Oregon Just Fined Pacific Seafood $3.2 Million for Water Pollution. The Company Says the State Is ‘Out of Control.’

June 15, 2026
FishonlineFishonline
Subscribe
  • Homepage
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • About
  • TOS
  • Seafood
  • News
  • Trending
  • Travel
FishonlineFishonline
Home » The EPA Just Repealed Power Plant Regulations That Were Reducing Mercury Levels in American Fish. Scientists Are Alarmed
News

The EPA Just Repealed Power Plant Regulations That Were Reducing Mercury Levels in American Fish. Scientists Are Alarmed

Mildred BellBy Mildred BellJune 15, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
The EPA Just Repealed Power Plant Regulations
The EPA Just Repealed Power Plant Regulations
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Mercury is released into the atmosphere when coal is burned in a power plant. It doesn’t remain there. Before settling in soil, lakes, and rivers, where bacteria transform it into methylmercury, a neurotoxic that builds up in fish tissue and becomes more concentrated at each stage of the food chain, it travels—sometimes several of miles. Lake bass, pike, swordfish, and tuna. The most weight is carried by the fish at the top. The Mercury and Air Toxics Standards were created in 2012 with the intention of blocking this pathway at its origin.

The 2024 revisions to those regulations tightened that disruption even more. They increased particulate matter standards for coal plants, tightened limits on mercury from lignite-fired plants, and mandated continuous real-time emissions monitoring so that local communities and regulators could actually see what was coming out of the stacks. The EPA completed the revocation of those 2024 revisions on February 19, 2026. Waterways and coal-fired power stations are now separated by the 2012 requirements.

It’s important to remember the figures that the EPA’s own study linked to this repeal. By 2035, the agency projected that the rollback will increase mercury emissions by about 8,189 pounds per year, a 23 percent increase above what the 2024 regulation would have permitted. This represents a halt to further progress rather than a return to pre-2012 conditions when compared to the baseline set by the success of the original MATS rule, which reduced mercury emissions from coal plants by approximately 90% between 2012 and 2021, from about 29 tons per year to a fraction of that.

The EPA used cost savings—an estimated $670 million freed up for power plants by eliminating what it described as “unnecessary” and onerous requirements—as reason for approving that increase. In its cost-benefit analysis, the EPA made no effort to estimate the additional mercury’s negative effects on the environment and human health. One of the aspects of the rules that critics found most concerning was the imbalance in that accounting.

The portion of the rollback that is less well-known to the general public but greatly worries environmental experts and regulators is the removal of continuous emissions monitoring. In order to give regulators continuous data instead of sporadic snapshots, the 2024 regulation mandated that coal and oil plants build systems that track particle emissions in real time. The implementation of the remaining 2012 standards relies on interval testing, which generates windows during which non-compliance may go undetected, in the absence of such ongoing monitoring.

The most recent finalized national mercury emissions data available is from 2024, with 2025 data not expected until summer 2026, according to WRAL’s reporting from North Carolina, where Duke Energy operates coal plants. This means that the rollback’s short-term effects won’t be detectable in official data for a while. The CEMS requirement was created expressly to solve this transparency issue.

Pregnant women, nursing mothers, and young children—especially newborns whose brains are still developing—are the groups most at danger from elevated methylmercury in fish, as the EPA has repeatedly noted in its own guideline materials. Both the placental and blood-brain barriers are crossed by methylmercury, and there is a wealth of reliable scientific research on its effects on neurological development.

Because of this known risk, the EPA has its own fish consumption warnings that still advise pregnant women to stay away from high-mercury fish like swordfish and king mackerel. These recommendations are unaffected by the removal of the 2024 MATS updates. It modifies the path of mercury into the water that gives rise to the fish that are the subject of the advisories.

Looking at the timetable, there’s a sense: between April and July of 2025, 71 coal plants were granted two-year exemptions from the current mercury restrictions; in February of 2026, the stricter 2024 requirements were repealed; and now, legal challenges are pending in the D.C. Circuit—that the institutional ability that generated the 90% mercury reduction over a fourteen-year period is being questioned, not merely a regulatory wording.

The EPA Just Repealed Power Plant Regulations
The EPA Just Repealed Power Plant Regulations

The legal challenges are being monitored by the Harvard Environmental and Energy Law Program. According to experts quoted by WRAL, the present deregulatory tsunami is exceptionally broad in scope and raises long-term concerns about how future environmental standards will be set and defended. It’s still unclear if and when the courts will step in. The coal plants continue to burn.

Mercury and Air Toxics Standards (MATS) amendments The EPA Just Repealed Power Plant Regulations
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
Previous ArticleOregon Just Fined Pacific Seafood $3.2 Million for Water Pollution. The Company Says the State Is ‘Out of Control.’
Next Article Why Norway Has Quietly Become the World’s Most Exciting Destination for Serious Seafood Travellers
Mildred Bell

    Mildred Bell is a full-time digital professional, seasoned traveler, and ardent outdoor enthusiast who infuses her writing with a sincere love of the natural world. In her role as Senior Editor at fishonline.co.uk, the online home of Seafood Audit International, Mildred is in charge of editorial content covering news about the seafood industry, updates on food safety, politics, finance, and commentary from prominent figures in the fishing and seafood industries. Beyond the desk, Mildred has a deeper connection to the material she edits. She is a passionate angler who has spent years fishing open waters, rivers, and coastlines throughout the UK and beyond. Her genuine knowledge of the fishing industry informs all of her editorial choices. Mildred's passion for travel stems from the same restless curiosity. She has traveled to many different continents with a rod, a notebook, and an eye for the stories that others overlook.

    Related Posts

    Oregon Just Fined Pacific Seafood $3.2 Million for Water Pollution. The Company Says the State Is ‘Out of Control.’

    June 15, 2026

    Why South Carolina’s Commercial Fishing Industry Is in Decline — and What Offshore Anglers Are Doing to Fill the Gap

    June 12, 2026

    The San Francisco Restaurant That Has Served the Same Cioppino Recipe Since 1938 — and Will Never Change It

    June 12, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

    Why Norway Has Quietly Become the World’s Most Exciting Destination for Serious Seafood Travellers

    Food June 15, 2026

    The wooden drying racks rise along the harbor and hillsides in February in the Lofoten…

    The EPA Just Repealed Power Plant Regulations That Were Reducing Mercury Levels in American Fish. Scientists Are Alarmed

    June 15, 2026

    Oregon Just Fined Pacific Seafood $3.2 Million for Water Pollution. The Company Says the State Is ‘Out of Control.’

    June 15, 2026

    The New England Clam Bake Recipe You Can Actually Pull Off in Your Own Backyard Without a Permit or a Pit

    June 15, 2026

    FDA Places Seafood and Papayas Under Greater Import Scrutiny — Here’s What Consumers Need to Know

    June 15, 2026

    Inside the Race to Build America’s First Fully Sustainable Indoor Shrimp Farm in the Heart of the Midwest

    June 15, 2026

    This Mussels in White Wine Recipe Is the Easiest Impressive Dinner You Will Ever Put on a Weeknight Table

    June 15, 2026

    Fishonline.co.uk is the official online home of Seafood Audit International, a UK-based food safety and quality management consultancy with more than 25 years of hands-on experience in the global seafood and fishing industries. Based in Wellington, Somerset, we work with fish processors, food businesses, government inspection services, and international organisations to deliver practical, measurable, and cost-effective food safety solutions.We are not a generic food safety company. Seafood and fish products are our entire focus — and that specialisation is what makes us different.Who We AreSeafood Audit International was founded on a straightforward belief: that food safety training and quality management should be practical, accessible, and genuinely useful — not a box-ticking exercise.For over two decades we have worked with clients ranging from high street fish retailers and small-scale processors to large-scale international fishing operations, government bodies, and seafood exporters in the developing world. Our experience stretches from dhows on Lake Victoria to the trawlers of the UK coastline — giving us a depth of real-world knowledge that classroom-only consultancies simply cannot match.Our lead consultant is a fully qualified auditor with extensive experience across British Retail Consortium (BRC) and ISO 9000 quality management standards, HACCP implementation, food hygiene, and the development of national food safety legislation for governments internationally.What We DoSeafood Audit International provides a comprehensive range of training, auditing, and consultancy services tailored specifically to the seafood and fishing industries:Training Courses

    Top Insights

    Why Norway Has Quietly Become the World’s Most Exciting Destination for Serious Seafood Travellers

    June 15, 2026

    The EPA Just Repealed Power Plant Regulations That Were Reducing Mercury Levels in American Fish. Scientists Are Alarmed

    June 15, 2026

    Oregon Just Fined Pacific Seafood $3.2 Million for Water Pollution. The Company Says the State Is ‘Out of Control.’

    June 15, 2026

    The New England Clam Bake Recipe You Can Actually Pull Off in Your Own Backyard Without a Permit or a Pit

    June 15, 2026

    FDA Places Seafood and Papayas Under Greater Import Scrutiny — Here’s What Consumers Need to Know

    June 15, 2026
    Disclaimer

    Important Editorial Notice: All content on fishonline.co.uk, including that pertaining to business finance, political developments, financial markets, and regulatory changes, is provided solely for informational and discussion purposes. It is merely the opinion of a third party and does not represent the expert advice of fishonline.co.uk or Seafood Audit International.
    We strongly advise against taking any action based on any political, legal, or financial information found on this website without first consulting an impartial expert. Seafood Audit International is not governed by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and is not permitted to offer financial advice. Always seek advice from an independent financial advisor authorized by the FCA before making any financial decisions. Seek legal advice from an experienced attorney.

    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.
    • Homepage
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • About
    • TOS
    • Seafood
    • News
    • Trending
    • Travel

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.