Potomac Coal Ash Spill Could Reach Washington DC

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Huffington Post   |  Dave Burdick   |   March 10, 2009 11:29 AM

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UPDATE: While the coal ash was spilled, Maryland officials are now saying that much of the spill thankfully missed the river:

"Any spill of coal ash is very serious, but it does seem like it will be of relatively limited impact, that it was a minor leak," said Dawn Stoltzfus, a spokeswoman for the Maryland Department of the Environment.


She said papermaker NewPage Corp., which owns the leaky pipeline over the river's North Branch, must tell state regulators within five days how it plans to prevent future spills. The agency is considering fining the company, Stoltzfus said.

EARLIER:

Looks like it's happened again -- a large quantity of wet coal ash has spilled into the North Branch Potomac River in Maryland, according to the Maryland Department of the Environment. The Natural Resource Defense Council points out that spilling coal ash into a river upstream from Washington, DC, is a hell of a way to get the attention of lawmakers:

I don't know how long it'll take for the spill to reach DC proper, but its a hell of a way to send a message about how much we need to regulate the handling of this stuff. All the more reason to thank the Obama Administration for announcing plans to propose federal regulations for coal waste.

From the MDE's release on the North Branch Potomac coal spill:

Officials estimated a "dime sized" hole developed in the pipeline around 8:00 p.m. on Sunday, March 8, 2009, and was discovered at 6:00 a.m. on March 9, 2009. The damaged pipeline was immediately taken out of service for repairs while cleanup efforts to remove spilled ash from the West Virginia shoreline are ongoing. Two unaffected parallel pipelines continue to carry ash slurry while repairs and cleanup operations are underway. MDE maintains regulatory authority over the North Branch Potomac River to the ordinary high water line along the West Virginia shoreline. In addition, MDE regulates the discharge of the coal ash lagoon in West Virginia through a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES), Permit since it normally discharges directly into the river after treatment.

The AP has now also filed a report on the Potomac coal spill:

Workers on Tuesday were cleaning up the spill on the West Virginia bank of the river's North Branch. The spill began about 8 p.m. Sunday and continued until 6 a.m. Monday, said Dawn Stoltzfus, spokeswoman for the Maryland Department of the Environment.


She said the dime-sized hole was discovered by employees of NewPage Corp., which burns coal to produce electricity for its paper mill in Luke, about 150 miles west of Baltimore. The company stores the coal ash, also called fly ash, in a lagoon fed by three parallel pipelines that cross the river.

The spill was small compared with December's billion-gallon spill of coal ash sludge in Kingston, Tenn. Still, Maryland state regulators were concerned about a potential environmental threat from the sludge, which could contain high concentrations of selenium, sulfate, arsenic, iron or manganese.

"Obviously, fly ash is not something that one wants in the water," said Harley Speir, a fisheries biologist with the state Department of Natural Resources.

UPDATE: While the coal ash was spilled, Maryland officials are now saying that much of the spill thankfully missed the river: "Any spill of coal ash is very serious, but it does seem like it will be ...
UPDATE: While the coal ash was spilled, Maryland officials are now saying that much of the spill thankfully missed the river: "Any spill of coal ash is very serious, but it does seem like it will be ...
 
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If that had been Clean Coal there would be no ash to spill.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:09 AM on 03/13/2009
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Does clean coal make for clean ash?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:16 AM on 03/12/2009
- GlenRast I'm a Fan of GlenRast 34 fans permalink
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Clean coal is right up there with military intelligence and GOP morality in the list of two words that should never be used together.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:06 AM on 03/13/2009
- mcnary I'm a Fan of mcnary 2 fans permalink
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Coal is Cash.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 PM on 03/10/2009
- ChelseaC I'm a Fan of ChelseaC 155 fans permalink
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Coal is dirty.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 03/11/2009
- MyTake I'm a Fan of MyTake 32 fans permalink
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You have to love the naming conventions used by the coal and oil cartels.

FLY ASH, what a non offensive sounding two words.

TAILING PONDS, what a non offensive sounding two words.

The effluent from coal, oil and mining is killing the planet and we describe the effluent with nice sound words.

Every North American politician should be made to walk neck deep into these effluent holding areas and have their picture taken, Obama included because he wants to CLEAN the coal and not release the HYDROGEN and HEMP economies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:07 PM on 03/10/2009
- mudshark12 I'm a Fan of mudshark12 5 fans permalink

Yes, let's go swimming in the lovely tailing pond which is unlined by concrete so that all of it's goodness can leach right into the local water table. These truly excellent fly ash ponds are, of course, held back by an earth dam in the interest of economy. And when they periodically break (like the one that just did in Tennessee) then the Coal companies can get their PR department to spinning out the news on how it's "being contained", surely there's nothing to worry about. Who cares when all of the Mountain Top Removal mining turns the Appalachians into a desert wasteland similar to the surface of the Moon? And who wants clean air to breathe? Or clean water to drink? I mean after all we NEED the electricity, don't we? That Wind and/or Solar farming is just too new and progressive for an established industry like Big Coal.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:12 AM on 03/12/2009
- CAHertzfe I'm a Fan of CAHertzfe 32 fans permalink
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Don't worry, it's CLEAN COAL ash.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:28 PM on 03/10/2009

now that is classic, and just to darn funny. Thank you. Made my stomach hurt laughing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:31 PM on 03/10/2009
- TerrapinCB I'm a Fan of TerrapinCB 18 fans permalink
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American Hayek, seeing as you are a one month old n00b troII to HP, you are already following the other regurgitationcans that get worked up and post here.

Fly ash is one of the residues generated in the combustion of coal. Fly ash is generally captured from the chimneys of coal-fired power plants, and is one of two types of ash that jointly are known as coal ash.

Ok, even from your provided link (which someone already called you on) there sure was a spill/leak. Are you usually this obtuse?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:09 PM on 03/10/2009
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Turtle CB, I am not a troll, just someone trying to inject some REALITY into the manufactured outrage in this story. HuffPo is painted into a corner - the post started off screaming 4000 GALLON SPILL HEADED TO DC !!!!!!!! before all the facts were in. The screaming main page stays, appealing to the advertisers on HuffPo I suppose, but in fact this was a minor leak of an industrial byproduct. I just find the deceit here amazing.

This ash sludge is a hazard due to its high pH and little else. "Metals" are concentrated in all sorts of overland flows, springs, and rivers in Appalachia. All the trace elements listed as dangers in ash sludge occur as background in the coals and shales of Appalachia. Should all Appalchians be relocated immediately like Love Canal?

The danger here is massed lagoons, like Kingston. If sanity could somehow prevail, regulators would work with industry on disposal solutions. The green agenda answer is to destroy the industry. Wrong for America.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 PM on 03/10/2009
- Hart I'm a Fan of Hart 3 fans permalink
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This doesn't freak me out all that much considering raw sewage is routinely dumped into the Potomac (right at Chain Bridge which is in the middle of the population density) when precipitation is high. That's why there are signs saying you can't swim, shouldn't fish and boat at your own risk. The smell's unbearable when it's been raining a lot.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:36 PM on 03/10/2009
- hedgewytch I'm a Fan of hedgewytch 4 fans permalink

Please consider supporting your local Waterkeeper Alliance. In this case: Potomac Riverkeeper
http://www.potomacriverkeeper.org/cms/index.php

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:43 PM on 03/10/2009
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Thank you Hart. Appalachian coal and agricultural practices alway end up the whipping boys of inside the beltway luddites. In fact the fecal discharge of the sprawling DC suburbs, the run off from their oil soaked streets, and the sediment from their clear cut DC developments dwarf anything that a couple of strip mines and hay farms can do.

Yet the Balto Sun will send a reporter out every third year like clockwork to stand on the edge of a surface mine, take a few photos, and write a scathing tsk-tsk article about something he knows nothing about for consumption of the silk tie set in Anne Arundel County. You know who you are.

Get your priorites right people, and fix your own house first. This heinous, misleading screamer in HuffPo is meant only to advance the anti-carbon agenda. Period.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:00 PM on 03/10/2009
- TJCole I'm a Fan of TJCole 162 fans permalink
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Good that's the perfect place for, their "clean coal" and I hope more arrives soon..!

If they allowed us to grow Industrial Hemp, there would be none of this and a lot less CO2 as well...!

http://hemp4fuel.com/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:08 PM on 03/10/2009
- MyTake I'm a Fan of MyTake 32 fans permalink
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You, sir, are absolutely correct. Releasing the Hydrogen and Hemp economies would abolish the oil and energy cartels in just one decade.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 PM on 03/10/2009
- IbeHappy I'm a Fan of IbeHappy 5 fans permalink
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But it's CLEAN coal, right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:20 PM on 03/10/2009
- Egalitare I'm a Fan of Egalitare 6 fans permalink
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LOL!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:03 PM on 03/10/2009
- RButler I'm a Fan of RButler 60 fans permalink

How would pollution entering DC be distinguished from everything else?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:16 PM on 03/10/2009
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AP has basically retracted this story, there is no 4000 gallon spill of fly ash sludge headed to DC.

Not that HufPo is really journalism or anything..­..

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/P/POTOMAC_FLY_ASH?SITE=FLTAM&SECTION=US

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:59 PM on 03/10/2009
- hedgewytch I'm a Fan of hedgewytch 4 fans permalink

"A 4,000-gallon spill of potentially toxic coal ash sludge mostly missed the Potomac River and doesn't appear to have done much harm, a Maryland environmental official said Tuesday."
" ..a minor amount of sludge caused discoloration in the river about 30 feet downstream­,.."

Yes, lucky that it MOSTLY missed the river. But its pretty hard to figure out how much actually went in to the river and in what toxicity. Much of the pollutants in fly ash are persistant pollutants which mean that they build up in the environment, animals and fish, and accumulate. So even a relatively "small" discharge can cause an untold amount of harm.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:48 PM on 03/10/2009
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People, google "fly ash" - they have been putting it in cement mix for 100 years. Honest to Pete, open your minds and do some real research !

Here is a better headline:

"Dripping Pipe Send Green DC Radicals Into Orbit - Residents 30 Feet Downstream Filing Lawsuit Over Slightly Discolored River !!"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:19 PM on 03/10/2009
- baghdadjoe I'm a Fan of baghdadjoe 37 fans permalink

Maybe this ash spill will finally get the attention of DC lawmakers:

There is no such thing as "clean coal".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:19 PM on 03/10/2009
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There is no such thing as this story. AP has retracted this story as of 4 PM today.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:04 PM on 03/10/2009
- markinaz I'm a Fan of markinaz 6 fans permalink

Could not have happened to a more deserving group of people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:51 PM on 03/10/2009
- DCdweller I'm a Fan of DCdweller 4 fans permalink

Yes well, what a sad horrible person you are. You should never wish anything like this on anyone, anywhere, for any reason. Guess your Mother and Father didn't do a good job raising you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:18 PM on 03/10/2009
- hedgewytch I'm a Fan of hedgewytch 4 fans permalink

"Obviously, fly ash is not something that one wants in the water," said Harley Speir, a fisheries biologist with the state Department of Natural Resources.

Or in the air, or on land, or in our food.... Usually leaks and spills occur far away from nice urban centers or residential areas. Hard to get worked up about some oil spill far away on the tundra, or when some poor backwood's people get washed away by coal sludge. But when it is suddenly in your backyard, things begin to look a bit differently don't they? Most of the Potomac flows through really depressed poor areas. Will the Congress people and our President look out their window and notice? Maybe. Perhaps the citizens of DC can carefully collect water samples and leave them at the White House.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 03/10/2009

Part of georgetown is next to the river... The kennedy center, the pentagon (in VA) and a whole host of nice areas are along the river. While the Annicostia flows through some very depressed areas, the Potomac flows through some of the nicest parts (and most prosperous) of the region.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:05 PM on 03/10/2009
- hedgewytch I'm a Fan of hedgewytch 4 fans permalink

Thanks for the correction. Still, both those rivers need help, now more than ever.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:41 PM on 03/10/2009

More than likely there will be a big deal about this and it will get cleaned up. They have been dumping all of this stuff plus more in the rivers in nearby West Virginia for 30 years but no one seems to care.
- - -
http://meancleantech.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:27 PM on 03/10/2009
- Pharos I'm a Fan of Pharos 9 fans permalink

Do you have a reference for that? Based on what little I know it would seem to be valuable in cement (replace 30% of cement) so why throw it away? It's already collected. I'm seriously asking as I know almost nothing about this subject.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:38 PM on 03/10/2009
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