EPA Getting Serious About Lead in Avgas?

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Key Takeaways:

  • The EPA is advancing administrative steps, including a draft endangerment finding, to address lead in avgas following a petition from Friends of the Earth citing public health risks.
  • Before any ban, the EPA must formally determine that health risks exist under the Clean Air Act, prompting the agency to conduct lead pollution studies around U.S. airports.
  • A significant hurdle to removing lead is the current lack of a ready high-octane substitute for 100LL avgas, despite calls for an immediate ban.
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The Environmental Protection Agency continues to go through administrative motions suggesting it’s serious about removing lead from avgas. Earlier this month, the agency sent a draft endangerment finding to the White House as part of its proposed action to address a petition from Friends of the Earth claiming that lead in avgas represents a public health risk.

Before it can move forward, the EPA has to issue a finding under terms of the Clean Air Act that health risks actually exist. To reach that finding, the agency has ordered lead pollution studies around a number of U.S. airports. Friends of the Earth has asked EPA to ban lead from avgas “without delay,” although the industry still has no ready high-octane substitute for 100LL.

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