Ash ponds at two Birmingham coal facilities top list for arsenic
January 8th, 2009 by Wendi Lewis
A report published today by the Birmingham News says the coal ash retaining ponds at two Birmingham-area coal-fired energy plants contain the highest levels of arsenic in the country, ranked and Nos. 2 and 3 on a list compiled by the Environmental Integrity Project (EIP). The study evaluates the amount of ash deposited in on-site ash ponds and landfills from 2000-2006, according to the News report.
The EIP released the report, titled “Disaster in Waiting: Toxic Coal Ash Disposal in Impoundments at Power Plants” yesterday. The report says U.S. Environmental Protection Agency data shows power plants are disposing of high volumes of toxic metals in open lagoons.
There is a lot of attention on this issue now, following a December 22, 2008 disaster when the retaining wall at a coal-fired electric plant in Kingston, Tennessee, failed, dumping more than 1 billion gallons of toxic coal ash and other waste over 300 acres in East Tennessee. The event is being called the worst environmental disaster since the Exxon Valdez oil spill.
But the Tennessee disaster is just the tip of the iceberg. In addition to its official report, which listed Birmingham-area facilities Gaston Steam Plant in Shelby County and Gorgas Steam Plant in Walker County at No. 2 and 3, the EIP issued a press release stating that other toxic coal pollution dumps around the United States pose a greater potential danger than the Tennessee coal ash spill disaster site.
According to the release, at least 13 states have three or more under-regulated “wet dumps” on the “Worst Of” list for toxic chemicals. One coal pollution dump in Orlando, Fla., is reported to have TEN TIMES more arsenic than the Tennesee disaster site.
The release says the Tennessee facility was found on five of the six toxic chemical lists for the 50 worst coal-fired power plant pollution “wet dumps.”
EIP evaluations were based on industry-reported data collected by the EPA Toxic Reporting Inventory (TRI) data system for 2000-2006. EIP looked at the presence of arsenic, chromium, lead, nickel, selenium and thallium in the waste at Tennessee-style pollution dumping sites across the nation.
Eric Schaeffer, director of the Environmental Integrity Project, says, “The Tennessee eco-disaster has cast a spotlight on what is a very serious national problem – the existence of under-regulated toxic pollution coal dump sites near coal-fired pwoer plants that pose a serious threat to drinking water supplies, rivers and streams.” He said the Tennessee disaster is a warning sign of more trouble to come.
The EIP is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization established in March 2002 by former EPA enforcement attorneys to advocate for more effective enforcement of environmental laws. Read the full news release and official report:
EIP Report: Disaster in Waiting
Related posts:
- Beasley Allen evaluating claims resulting from Tennessee coal-ash spill disaster, eyeing safety of Alabama plants
- Study: Cancer risk ‘disturbingly’ higher near coal ash ponds
- Coal Ash Spill Leads to Arsenic Warnings for Tennessee Wells
- Beasley Allen files coal ash spill class action lawsuit on behalf of residents and property owners affected
- Scientists confirm sludge contains arsenic, radium
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