Tata Steel faces deadline to meet emissions standards, risks multi-million euro fines
Tata Steel has been given a few more weeks to ensure that its emissions comply with legal standards, or face multi-million euro fines, according to Noordhollands Dagblad. The company had originally been granted until mid-February by the Environmental Protection Agency for the North Sea Canal Area (EPA), but it gained additional time due to a lawsuit that was initially announced but later withdrawn.
In December, the EPA issued two significant fines against Tata Steel totaling over 27 million euros for failing to meet emission standards. The company was required to significantly reduce emissions of harmful substances, including heavy metals and carcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), from its coke gas factories 1 and 2. According to measurements, these emissions exceeded the legal limits by five to twenty times.
Tata Steel criticized the deadline, calling it "completely unrealistic and impossible" to reduce emissions so quickly, and questioned the accuracy of the measurements. The company initially announced plans to take legal action but has since withdrawn the lawsuit. A company spokesperson explained, "We’ve realized that legal action doesn’t help. We want to have a discussion with the EPA to resolve this matter."
The Environmental Protection Agency now expects Tata to comply with the emission standards "in the short term." The agency will conduct further measurements to verify compliance, but results may take several months. If the company is still found to be in violation, half of the imposed fines could be enforced.
This is not the first time that the EPA has imposed fines on Tata Steel. In December, the EPA also instructed the company to submit a corrective action plan within six weeks to address the outdated Coke Gas Factory 2, which needs to meet regulatory requirements.
In a February court ruling, both parties were ordered to make additional agreements, and the company was given one year to carry out the necessary improvements. Failure to do so could result in the company’s permit being revoked.