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United States

Report Finds Widespread Contamination at Nation's Coal Ash Sites (washingtonpost.com) 123

Nearly all 250 coal-fired plants in operation in the U.S. have leaked chemicals and contaminated the local groundwater supply with toxins [Editor's note: the link may be paywalled; you can check the alternative source, and original report (PDF)], according to a report released this week by environmental groups Environmental Integrity Project and Earthjustice. From a report: The report found that 91 percent of the nation's coal-fired power plants reported elevated levels of contaminants such as arsenic, lithium, chromium and other pollutants in nearby groundwater. In many cases, the levels of toxic contaminants that had leaked into groundwater were far higher than the thresholds set by the Environmental Protection Agency, the groups said.

The examples span the country. At a family ranch south of San Antonio, a dozen pollutants have leaked from a nearby coal ash dump, data showed. Groundwater at one Maryland landfill that contains ash from three coal plants was contaminated with eight pollutants. In Pennsylvania, levels of arsenic in the groundwater near a former coal plant were several hundred times the level the EPA considers safe for drinking. The voluminous data became publicly available for the first time last year because of a 2015 regulation that required disclosures by the overwhelming majority of coal plants.

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Report Finds Widespread Contamination at Nation's Coal Ash Sites

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 05, 2019 @03:48PM (#58220986)

    Seriously, this is a fact. There is toxic coal ash from coal plants in the groundwater of just about every single state. They claimed this could never happen, we needed to deregulate, now here it is. Prepare for the lies, here they come.

    • by Zorro ( 15797 )

      It took years for anything to get down to the groundwater. Likely it has been seeping down since the 1960s to show up now.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Well, no. Wrong. It takes roughly 1 year for groundwater to enter the tappable aquifer depending on topography. However it has been going on that long, so that part is not wrong.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Don't worry, most of the really bad pollutants went into the air instead. Check mercury downwind of all these plants....I did.
    • No need to lie, without burning that coal we'd be living in poverty and have short lives. the benefits far outweighed the negatives, fossil fuel use built our civilization.

        • Yes civilization recently started using nuclear and other types of power... 80% comes from fossil fuel though.

          I do support moving to non-polluting fuel, that's within our reach now. But I was only speaking of centuries of progress made with fossil fuel power.

          • by aliquis ( 678370 )

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

            All our nuclear power plants was made 1972-1985, so there's been none for made for the last 34 years and they started showing up 47 years ago.

            (That power do pollute too but less, then again wind- and watermills are older, and we still make almost half of our electricity using hydro power.)

            • Sweden isn't the norm though, I was speaking of planet earth, which gets 80% its power from fossil fuel, centuries into the industrial revolution. Sure, I'd like that to change but reality can't be denied.

      • Or you could had used slaves. Renewable and ecological.

      • You can get me some Brontosaurus ribs and drop them off on the way home.

        The Flintstones is NOT a documentary. The world is not flat either. Get your head out of your ass.

        • You seem to be utterly ignorant of history, engineering and science. You have nothing that supports your sarcastic view while I have centuries of progress and increase in human lifespan, health and happiness on mine.

          You are the one with your head up your ass.

          • by shilly ( 142940 )

            What you have is all of us selling our birthright for a mess of pottage. The pottage contained longer life for now, better health for now, somewhat greater happiness for now. The birthright was a functioning climate and a planet free of coal ash, mercury, etc.

      • by necro81 ( 917438 )

        fossil fuel use built our civilization

        I see you used the past tense: "built". Then you would probably agree that, while fossil fuel jumpstarted our technological society to its present state, that is not a justification for its continued use indefinitely (until they run out.) In other words: it's time to move on. Furthermore, while fossil fuels' relative abundance got industrialization rolling at a tremendous pace, it made us complacent and inefficient about how we use energy. Again: we claim to be a

  • We need to dig this stuff up and extract that vital resource.
  • Extra info (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Vanyle ( 5553318 ) on Tuesday March 05, 2019 @03:57PM (#58221046)

    Here is a link to a website by the company that did this report https://ashtracker.org/ [ashtracker.org] Cool stuff.

  • Just lower the regulations. They clearly have been over burdensome to business and a ploy of the socialist Democrats that want to ruin this great country.

    Make coal great again!
  • by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Tuesday March 05, 2019 @04:08PM (#58221124)

    would also have checked all the coal plants that have been shutdown. If you add all them in, you could get closer to 100% contaminated.

  • I think Google has contaminated more of the planet than just coal power plants with Chromium...

  • just need a crack crew of trump golf club members to publish a 'scientific' study showing that coal ash is healthy.

    problem solved.

  • ....Lithium shortage expected...
    (https://www.engineering.com/AdvancedManufacturing/ArticleID/17068/Lithium-Shortage-Expected-Due-to-Lack-of-Mines.aspx) ...Chromium prices jump on severe supply shortage....
    https://www.metalbulletin.com/... [metalbulletin.com]

    Sounds like that's not an ash pile, it's a gold mine.

    • correct. If we will get nuclear power plants with 800C or above, we can actually separate those elements out FISCALLY and environmentally sounds. Ideally, we would then use old mines for storage of separated elements.
  • ... by altering the "safe," levels of contamination. [/s]

  • Time to build Nuclear power plants that have temps of 800C or so. That can be used to efficiently melt and separate the elements in the ash. IOW, using nuclear power, we can mine the ash and clean it up. Any waste elements such as mercury, lead, etc should be put in designated mines that can handle 1 type of element. IOW, 1 mine just for mercury. Another for lead. Another for tungsten. etc. etc. etc. Like Helium, these can then be sold at global market prices, or sold locally at 10% below global.

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