News Tagged ‘environment

Congressional subcommittee chair hears complaints of coal ash victims

for sale sign 100x100 Congressional subcommittee chair hears complaints of coal ash victimsGlen and Lisa Sexton listed their house in Kingston, for sale last September and had plenty of out-of-state offers. But since an a coal ash impoundment pond at the Tennessee Valley Authority () plant 16 miles away failed last December and flooded the neighboring community with more than a billion gallons of , no one seems interested in their home. “Our situation is we can’t sell it. It’s worthless,” Glen says.

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TVA’s new chairman says coal ash disaster must not happen again

mike duncan 100x100 TVAs new chairman says coal ash disaster must not happen againThe new chairman for the Tennessee Valley Authority () says the disastrous coal ash spill that dumped more than a billion gallons of toxic material on to an east community and into the Emory River must never happen again, according to WHNT-TV.

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Pennsylvania says no to TVA coal ash storage

Coal ash that poured from the Tennessee Valley Authority () Kingston, , Fossil Plant onto an east community last December and recovered by cleanup crews is far too toxic to be stored in Pennsylvania’s coal mines, according to officials in that state. Authorities issued a statement saying it has strict regulations for the material to be stored there.

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Summer conditions likely to increase coal ash going airborne

Hotter and drier summer conditions increase the likelihood of coal ash going airborne, increasing the potential for the toxic material to be inhaled by those living near the site that was heavily damaged when a Tennessee Valley Authority () fossil fuel plant’s impoundment pond was breached, causing more than a billion gallons of to tumble down on to a neighboring community.

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EPA to oversee TVA’s coal ash cleanup efforts

tva logo 150x150 EPA to oversee TVAs coal ash cleanup effortsThe U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) signed an enforceable agreement with the Tennessee Valley Authority () to oversee the removal of coal ash from its east fossil fuel plant where a impoundment breached and dumped more than a billion gallons of toxic on to a neighboring community and into the Emory River. The was also ordered to reimburse the EPA for any costs associated with its oversight of the cleanup.

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Study: Cancer risk ‘disturbingly’ higher near coal ash ponds

eip logo 100x100 Study: Cancer risk disturbingly higher near coal ash pondsCancer rates among people living near coal ash ponds are “disturbingly high,” according to Environmental Integrity Project and Earthjustice, nonprofit organizations that studied Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) data from 210 ponds across the United States. The data is compiled in a report titled, “Coming Clean: What EPA Knows About the Dangers of .”

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TVA considers new sites to bury coal ash from spill

The Tennessee Valley Authority () is eying a dormant landfill near its Kingston, , plant and an abandoned strip mine in Cumberland County, , as possible locations to bury the ash it is cleaning up after one of its impoundment ponds leaked and dumped more than a billion gallons of coal ash on to an east community, according to WAAY-TV.

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TVA ups coal ash cleanup costs to $975 million

us money photo 100x100 TVA ups coal ash cleanup costs to $975 millionThe huge cleanup effort by the nation’s largest public utility could cost as much as $150 million more than previously estimated, according to the Associated Press. The effort to restore 300 acres of east property damaged by the December 2008 coal ash spill from a Kingston, , coal-firing plant is also expected to take years to complete.

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EPA to begin inspection of coal ash storage areas

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will send its first teams of inspectors to coal ash storage areas across the country within weeks, according to Knoxville Business News. The inspections are the first step in developing new regulations for an industry not currently overseen by federal regulations.

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Lawmakers, EPA search for methods to prevent future coal ash spills

Lawmakers sit on both sides of the argument about whether lining the coal ash impoundment at the Tennessee Valley Authority’s Kingston, , plant would have prevented the massive spill of toxic material onto neighboring homes and property, but legislation is moving through the House and Senate that would require such ponds created or expanded in the future to be lined, according to the Times Free Press.

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