The EPA is rejecting calls for tougher regulation of big livestock farms. It's promising more study

FILE - Pigs eat from a trough at the Las Vegas Livestock pig farm in Las Vegas, April 2, 2019. The Biden administration on Tuesday, Aug. 15, 2023, rejected pleas to strengthen regulation of large livestock farms that release manure and other pollutants into waterways, promising more study instead. (AP Photo/John Locher, File)

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. (AP) 鈥 President Joe Biden's administration Tuesday rejected pleas to strengthen regulation of large livestock farms that release manure and other pollutants into waterways, promising more study instead.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said it had denied two petitions from environmental and community groups seeking revision of rules dealing with the nation's biggest animal operations, which hold thousands of hogs, chickens and cattle.

鈥淎 comprehensive evaluation is essential before determining whether any regulatory revisions are necessary or appropriate,鈥 an agency statement said.

In a letter to advocacy groups, Assistant Administrator Radhika Fox said EPA will look closely at its program overseeing the farms as well as existing pollution limits. with representatives of agriculture, environmental groups, researchers and others to develop recommendations, she said.

鈥淲e want to hear from all voices and benefit from the findings of the most current research, and EPA is confident that these efforts will result in real progress and durable solutions to protecting the nation鈥檚 waters,鈥 Fox said.

Food & Water Watch, one of dozens of organizations that petitioned EPA in 2017 to crack down on livestock pollution, said the response continues a half-century of inadequate oversight. The agency has not revised its regulations of the farms since 2008.

鈥淔actory farms pose a significant and mounting threat to clean water, largely because EPA鈥檚 weak rules have left most of the industry entirely unregulated," said Tarah Heinzen, legal director of Food & Water Watch. 鈥淭he lack of urgency displayed in EPA鈥檚 decision doubles down on the agency鈥檚 failure to protect our water, and those who rely on it.鈥

Beef, poultry and pork have become more affordable staples in the American diet thanks to and the rise of giant farms. Yet federal and state environmental agencies often lack basic information such as where they鈥檙e located, how many animals they鈥檙e raising and how they deal with manure.

Runoff of waste and fertilizers from the operations 鈥 and from croplands where manure is spread 鈥 fouls streams, rivers and lakes. It鈥檚 a that create hazards in many waterways and dead zones in the Gulf of Mexico and Lake Erie.

Under the Clean Water Act, EPA regulates large farms 鈥 known as Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations, or CAFOs 鈥 covered by federal pollution permits. Federal law requires only those known to discharge waste to obtain permits, although some states make others do so.

EPA鈥檚 most recent tally, completed in May, shows 6,406 of the nation鈥檚 21,539 CAFOs have permits.

The agency's rules impose requirements on barns and feedlots where animals are held, plus manure storage facilities and land where manure and wastewater are spread.

While prohibiting releases to waterways, the rules make exceptions for discharges caused by severe rainfall and for stormwater-related runoff from croplands where waste was applied in keeping with plans that manage factors such as timing and amounts.

In her letter, Fox said EPA will study the extent to which CAFOs pollute waters and whether the problem is nationwide or concentrated in particular areas. It also will look into new technologies and practices that might bring improvements.

The advisory panel will have a number of meetings over 12-18 months, Fox said. After EPA gets the group's recommendations and completes its own study, the agency will decide whether new rules are needed or whether better implementation and enforcement of existing ones would be more effective.

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