DUNKARD CREEK-29JanY2K10
Washington PA Observer-Reporter Friday 29 January 2010:
Forum
on water to examine coal, gas production
1/29/2010 3:32
AM
By
Bob Niedbala, Staff writer
niedbala@observer-reporter.com
The
Upper Monongahela River Association will hold a water quality forum in February
focusing on the impact of coal and natural gas production on water resources and
the investigation into the Dunkard Creek fish kill.
The
forum will be the 13th sponsored by the organization dealing with water quality
issues in the Monongahela River basin.
The
12th forum, which was sponsored jointly by the association and Greene County
Conservation District and focused on the September fish kill, was held Dec. 3 in
Mt. Morris and drew more than 200 people.
Barry
Pallay, forum program director, said one of the issues for next month's meeting
again will be Dunkard Creek. State and federal agencies have been invited to
attend to share with the public any new data they have obtained since the last
meeting, he said.
The
discussion also is expected to include an update on the status of other streams
with high levels of total dissolved solids. Total dissolved solids have been
considered a contributing factor to the growth of the golden algae that is
believed to have killed fish and other aquatic life in Dunkard Creek.
The
other focus of the forum will be to address the impacts of coal mining and the
expected increase in natural gas production on the area's water resources,
Pallay said.
"We
want to begin examining coal and gas production and the water and waste disposal
needs related to it," he said, adding that, if the watershed is going to see an
increase in Marcellus gas drilling, it's important to consider what impacts it
may have on water resources.
The
association began sponsoring its water quality forums in October 2008 in
response to reports of problems caused by high levels of total dissolved solids
in the Monongahela River, Pallay said.
The
forums have helped inform the public on issues surrounding water quality in the
Mon River basin and brought together the various state and federal agencies
involved in enforcing water quality regulations.
At
next month's forum, a speaker is scheduled to attend from the Ohio River Valley
Water Sanitation Commission, an organization that works to improve water quality
in a large portion of the Ohio River basin.
The
representative is expected to explain what his organization has done to improve
water quality in the Ohio River and the lessons it has learned that could apply
to the association's efforts.
"We
really need to look at the watershed as an entire system," Pallay said.
This
upcoming water quality forum will be held at 6 p.m. Feb. 11 at the Granville,
W.Va., Volunteer Fire Department events center, about a mile west of the Star
City interchange of Interstate 79.
Agencies
invited to attend include the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental
Protection, West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection, Greene County
Department of Economic Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, RAIN Network, W.Va. Water Research Institute and W.Va.
Geologic and Economic Survey.
In
another matter, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Joe Hoeffel will visit the
Mt. Morris Community Center at 1 p.m. Saturday to discuss issues related to the
Dunkard Creek fish kill.
Copyright
Observer Publishing Co.
-----
Original Message -----
From:
Betty Wiley
To:
Sent: Thursday, January 28, 2010 8:38 PM
Subject:
good news for Pennsylvania
PennFuture
praises Rendell decision to increase DEP’s staff and
beef up regulations and
inspections of Marcellus Shale drillers
Group urges legislators to adopt a
severance tax on the drilling without delay
HARRISBURG, PA (January
28, 2010) – Jan Jarrett, president and CEO of Citizens for Pennsylvania’s Future
(PennFuture) today praised the governor’s decision to add 68 new staff to the
Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) and to strengthen regulation of gas
drilling to provide better protection of Pennsylvania’s communities and natural
resources from damage by natural gas drilling in the Marcellus Shale formation.
“We’re glad that the governor recognizes that Marcellus gas drilling
presents a new scale of environmental challenges to the Commonwealth’s natural
resources, especially water,” Jarrett said. “This belt and suspenders approach
will allow Pennsylvania to take advantage of the economic opportunities the
natural gas presents, but update our rules and increase our ability to
adequately oversee the drilling.
“Citizens across Pennsylvania have cried out
for smart regulations and true government oversight of the drilling,” continued
Jarrett. “The new staff and the new regulations will go a long way in responding
to those concerns. We are pleased that the governor recognized that rules
designed to regulate the kind of gas drilling traditionally done in Pennsylvania
are not up to addressing the environmental challenges presented by the deep
drilling required to get to the Marcellus Shale gas, and moved to modernize our
regulations.
“But no matter how well regulated, drilling for the Marcellus
gas will inevitably do some environmental damage as it depletes a natural
resource, and it will impose costs on taxpayers and communities,” continued
Jarrett. “That’s why we need to tax the drillers on the gas they pump out from
our state, and use that tax to protect and improve our environment. The drilling
companies pay such a tax nearly everywhere else they drill, and there is simply
no reason not to tax them here. This additional income should not just be added
to our general fund, but a major portion should go to the local communities that
host the drilling, to our Fish and Boat and Game Commissions, and to
environmental protection and conservation of our natural resources.
“The
governor’s announcements today put us on the right road to grow the economy and
protect the environment,” said Jarrett. “We look forward to working with our
elected officials to move our state further down that road, protecting our state
forests from rampant drilling, and having the drilling companies pay their fair
share through a severance tax.”
PennFuture is a statewide public interest
membership organization, founded in 1998. PennFuture's activities include
litigating cases before regulatory bodies and in local, state and federal
courts, advocating and advancing legislative action on a state and federal
level, public education, and assisting citizens in public advocacy.
Working
from the premise that “Every environmental victory grows the economy,”
PennFuture has successfully advocated for landmark environmental legislation,
including passage of the largest-ever environmental funding bond, public
investment in green energy and energy savings programs, passage of the
Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards Act, adoption of the Clean Vehicles
Program and adoption of a regulation to protect Pennsylvania’s babies by
restricting mercury pollution from coal-fired power plants. PennFuture has staff
throughout the state, in Harrisburg, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, West Chester,
Doylestown and Wilkes-Barre. The Philadelphia Inquirer called PennFuture the
“state’s leading environmental advocacy organization.”
Jeanne K.
Clark
Director of Communications
Citizens for Pennsylvania's Future
(PennFuture)
425 Sixth Avenue, Suite 2770
Pittsburgh, PA 15219
www.pennfuture.org
412-258-6683
(W)
412-258-6685 (F)
For cell phone and text messages:
412-736-6092
-----
Original Message -----
From:
Sally Snyder
To:
Beth Little ; cindy rank ; Donald C. Strimbeck
Sent:
Thursday, January 28, 2010 4:31 PM
Subject:
Fwd: Manchin to IOGA: "Call me if you don't think you're being treated
right."
Business
Thursday
January 28, 2010
Manchin
says state is 'partner'
Governor
speaks to hundreds of oil, gas executives gathered for annual meeting
by
George Hohmann
Daily
Mail Business Editor
Gov. Joe Manchin
struck a conciliatory note with the oil and natural gas industry Wednesday,
saying, "Markets and competition are tough enough. You don't need to have
government make it tougher."
Manchin was the
keynote speaker at the winter meeting of the Independent Oil and Gas Association
of West Virginia.
The natural gas
industry is being transformed by an increase in supplies from shale formations
that have been known for years to contain natural gas. Geotechnical engineers
and other specialists have figured out how to drill down into shale and then go
sideways to open a much bigger area of the gas-bearing
formation.
There's talk in the
natural gas industry that the Marcellus Shale gas field - known in the business
as a "play" - may contain 500 trillion cubic feet of gas. The Marcellus Shale
extends from northeast Pennsylvania around Bedford through southwestern
Pennsylvania, through the Northern Panhandle of West Virginia and into the
central part of the state. It underlies 15 million acres.
Instead of worrying
about running out of natural gas within 10 years - a prevalent discussion within
the industry in the 1970s - the discussion now is about having up to 90 years of
proven and potential supply.
"I know many of you
are from other parts of the country," Manchin said to the nearly 700 industry
executives gathered at the Marriott. He was alluding to the fact that several
out-of-state companies, including Exxon Mobil Corp. and Norway's StatoilHydro,
have snapped up properties in the Marcellus Shale in recent
months.
"We appreciate you so
much," Manchin said.
"I'm going into my
sixth year as governor, and one thing I've tried to put out there is
responsibility, continuity so you know what to expect and how it's going to be
delivered," Manchin said.
The governor said
he's been emphasizing "retail government," which he described as a government
that says thank you, meets deadlines and treats you with
respect.
"You don't go out
with a cease-and-desist order, you go out with a helping hand," he said. If a
situation isn't corrected then enforcement is appropriate, he
said.
Companies that are
looking for places to expand will find "you're going to have a partner at the
end of the day you never bargained for, asked for or even wanted," Manchin said.
"It's going to be government. You'd better pick a good partner. If you pick a
partner with no vision, no stability, you're going to have problems. That's
something we fight every day. The system doesn't think like you do with
timelines, deadlines."
Although the increase
in natural gas supplies has created excitement about what it may mean for jobs
and West Virginia's economy, the prospects for expansion bring concerns, too -
especially about the treatment of water used in the drilling
process.
Earlier this month,
the state Department of Environmental Protection announced the release of a
guidance document and permit addendum that it said is designed to better manage
water use and disposal by the oil and gas industry when drilling in the
Marcellus Shale.
The DEP said the
document "addresses the need for well operators to be diligent about protecting
the state's waters."
Manchin said, "We're
working on the water situation. I know this could be your biggest impediment.
This is the big thing with the EPA," he said, referring to the federal
Environmental Protection Agency.
"We're doing
everything we can to help you in this industry," he said. "You don't need
'gotcha! government.' How can you do it right if you don't know what must be
done? We're trying to get some clarity. We have a company from South Korea in
the filtering business. We're talking to everyone we can to find some
help."
Manchin did not bring
up two industry sore points:
* Chesapeake Energy,
one of the nation's largest natural gas producers, last year canceled plans for
a regional office in Charleston after it was surprised by a huge punitive damage
award and then found out that West Virginia offers no automatic right of appeal.
In his State of the State address earlier this month, Manchin praised the state
Supreme Court for working on rules that are intended to ensure the right of
appeal.
* Pennsylvania, which
has a large portion of the Marcellus Shale play and has already attracted
industry investment, does not have a severance tax on natural gas. West Virginia
does. A recent Penn State study estimated that because Pennsylvania has no
severance or property tax, wellhead revenue there is about 11 percent
higher.
Although Manchin
didn't specifically mention the severance tax, he did point out that during his
administration the food sales tax, business franchise tax and corporate income
tax have been lowered. "For every adjustment for business you have to make an
adjustment for consumers," he said. "You have to have a
balance."
Manchin concluded,
"We want you to do well. Call me if you don't think you're being treated right.
I want to make sure 'retail government' works for you."
He received a
standing ovation.
Contact writer George
Hohmann at busin...@dailymail.com
or 304-348-4836.
-----
Original Message -----
From:
Sally
Snyder
To:
John Snyder ;
Julie Archer ; Donald C.
Strimbeck ; Beth Little ; David McMahon ; Gary Zuckett ; cindyrank
Sent:
Thursday, January 28, 2010 4:30 PM
Subject:
Fwd: ProPublica: Pennsylvania’s Gas Wells Booming—But So Are
Spills
Message from sender:
check it
out
Pennsylvania’s Gas Wells
Booming—But So Are Spills
By Sabrina Shankman,
January 27, 2010 4:08 pm EST
http://www.propublica.org/feature/pas-gas-wells-booming-but-so-are-spills-127/
COMMONWEALTH
OF PENNSYLVANIA
Dept.
of Environmental Protection
Commonwealth
News Bureau
Room 308, Main Capitol Building
Harrisburg PA., 17120
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
01/28/2010
CONTACT:
Tom
Rathbun, DEP
717-787-1323
Governor
Rendell: PA Taking Aggressive Action to Protect Public, Environment as Marcellus
Shale Drilling Operations Expands
Directs
DEP to Hire 68 Additional Staff to Bolster Inspections, Environmental Compliance
New Regulations Planned to Improve Well Safety Standards
HARRISBURG
-- In order to protect Pennsylvania’s residents and environment from the impact
of increased natural gas exploration across the state, Governor Edward G.
Rendell announced today that the commonwealth is strengthening its enforcement
capabilities.
At
the Governor’s direction, the Department of Environmental Protection will begin
hiring 68 new personnel who will make sure that drilling companies obey state
laws and act responsibly to protect water supplies. DEP also will strengthen oil
and gas regulations to improve well construction standards. These critical
upgrades are designed to prevent gas leaks that can pose risks to the public and
water quality.
“Interest
in Pennsylvania’s Marcellus Shale formation is greater than ever before and as
natural gas prices continue to rise, that interest will only increase,” said
Governor Rendell. “In fact, the industry has told us that they expect to apply
for 5,200 permits to drill in the Marcellus Shale this year -- nearly three
times the number of permits we issued in all of 2009. Given these conditions, an
extraction tax is gaining widespread support across our state and I will again
ask the General Assembly to enact such a levy. It is fair and affordable to
drillers. They know it, and so do members of the House of Representatives who
voted for it last year.
“The
actions I am announcing today, however, are about decisive, progressive
protections for the people of Pennsylvania. We were able to hire 37 additional
inspectors and permitting staff in 2009, but the industry’s projected growth in
2010 means that we need additional inspectors to ensure oil and gas companies
follow environmental laws and regulations. As I’ve said all along, we want to
encourage the development of this resource because it’s a tremendous economic
opportunity for the state, but we will not allow that to happen at the expense
of our environment.”
DEP
performed 14,544 drilling site inspections in 2009 and took 678 enforcement
actions against drillers for violations.
The
68 additional personnel will be funded entirely from money generated by new,
higher permitting fees that were instituted in 2009—the first such increase
since 1984. The new fees were put in place with bipartisan support from the
General Assembly, industry and environmental
organizations.
The
Governor noted that given the need for these additional health and safety
personnel and the dedicated funding source that is independent of the state’s
General Fund, these new hires are exemptions to the general hiring freeze he
instituted last year.
DEP’s
work to amend Pennsylvania’s oil and gas regulations will strengthen well
construction standards and define a drilling company’s responsibility for
responding to gas migration issues, such as when gas escapes a well or rock
formation and seeps into homes or water wells. Specifically, he said the new
regulations will:
• Require
the casings of Marcellus Shale and other high-pressure wells to be tested and
constructed with specific, oilfield-grade cement;
• Clarify the
drilling industry’s responsibility to restore or replace water supplies affected
by drilling;
• Establish procedures for operators to identify and
correct gas migration problems without waiting for direction from DEP;
• Require drilling operators to notify DEP and local emergency
responders immediately of gas migration problems;
• Require well
operators to inspect every existing well quarterly to ensure each well is
structurally sound, and report the results of those inspections to DEP annually;
and
• Require well operators to notify DEP immediately if problems such
as over-pressurized wells and defective casings are found during
inspections.
“These
new draft regulations, which were developed through open meetings with experts
in the industry, are designed to give Pennsylvanians peace of mind by bringing
our state’s requirements up to par with other major gas producing states or, as
in the case of the well casing requirements, to a level that is even more
rigorous,” said Governor Rendell.
The
new regulations will be offered for public comment on Jan. 29 before going
through DEP’s formal rulemaking process.
Interest
in Pennsylvania’s Marcellus Shale formation has been increasing. One third of
the more than 6,200 oil and natural gas drilling permits DEP issued in 2009 were
for drilling in the Marcellus Shale. By comparison, only four of the more than
6,000 permits issued in 2005 were for the Marcellus
formation.
For
more information, visit www.depweb.state.pa.us.
For Immediate Release:
January 28, 2010
Contacts:
Lauren Townsend 215-939-7621
Co-Manager Joe Hoeffel 2010
Frank Custer - 215-527-5928
Joe
Hoeffel 2010 Eastern PA Press Contact
Matt Merriman- Preston - 412-600-3405
Joe
Hoeffel 2010 Western PA Press Contact
Press Advisory
Hoeffel to Hear from Greene County Residents Concerning
Environmental Issues Surrounding Dunkard Creek
Mt. Morris, January 28, 2010 – Democratic gubernatorial candidate Joe Hoeffel has
accepted an invitation from the Friends of Dunkard Creek to hear from concerned
residents of Greene County who will talk to him about hardships and concerns as
a result of recent environmental disasters, including a massive fish kill along
the waterway. Hoeffel will speak to residents about his commitment to protect
the health of Pennsylvanians, the beauty of Pennsylvania, and the sustainability
of the state’s resources.
WHO: Democratic
gubernatorial candidate Joe Hoeffel
WHAT: Meeting
with Greene County Residents Concerning Dunkard Creek
WHEN: Saturday,
January 30, 2010, 1pm
WHERE: Mt. Morris Community Center, 303 Mount Morris Road, Mt.
Morris PA 15349
THE
STATE JOURNAL Friday 29 January 2010:
Posted
Thursday, January 28, 2010 ; 06:00 AM | View
Comments | Post
Comment
Some
say study fails to portray increasing demand for state's energy.
By
JIM ROSS
For
The State Journal
The
time has come for West Virginia and neighboring states to prepare for a
significant decrease in coal production and the economic changes that will
come with it. That's according to a report issued last week from
Downstream Strategies, an environmental consulting firm based in
Morgantown.
The
report uses projections from the federal government to predict that coal
production in the central Appalachian region -- composed of southern West
Virginia, western Virginia, eastern Kentucky and eastern Tennessee -- will
decrease by half in the next 10 years.
"Coal
has contributed significantly to local and state economies in central
Appalachia, but production has fallen substantially over the last 12 years
as other coal basins and sources of fuel have become more competitive,"
said lead author Rory McIlmoil in a statement released with the study.
"This
trend is expected to continue as mining costs increase due to the
depletion of the lowest-cost coal reserves and as new environmental
regulations are implemented. As this happens, local and state economies
will need new sources of jobs and revenue to replace coal mining jobs and
taxes."
The
34-page report says new jobs and tax revenues can be created through
development of renewable energy and energy efficiency. Losses from the
decline of coal can be recaptured by gains from wind, solar, low-impact
hydro and sustainable biomass production and from a strong focus on energy
efficiency improvements.
Coal
production in the region peaked at 290 million tons in 1997, but it fell
by about 20 percent to 235 million tons in 2008, according to the report.
Central
Appalachian coal got a boost in the 1990s from the first phase of the
Clean Air Act as electric utilities switched to central Appalachian coal
to meet smokestack emission standards.
Since
then, many coal-fired power plants have installed scrubbers, allowing them
to burn coal from other regions, too.
The
report suggests that states act now to diversify the economy of the
central Appalachian region. Among steps it recommends:
- requiring
each state to provide 25 percent of its energy from renewable sources;
- grants, tax
credits, clean energy bonds or low-interest loans to support renewable
energy development and manufacturing;
- implementing
and strengthening net metering laws;
- developing
work force programs aimed at providing the skills and knowledge required
for renewable energy industries;
- strong
incentives for local ownership of energy
development.
McIlmoil
gave Gov. Joe Manchin a copy of the report this week, and the governor is
reviewing it, said Manchin spokesman Matt Turner.
Manchin
has said he recognizes West Virginia needs to diversify its economy, but
he also recognizes that coal "is going to be our primary source of energy
as we transition to our fuels of the future," Turner said.
The
governor wants investments in technology to enable the state to make that
transition, but coal will be the dominant energy source for the next 30
years, Turner said.
Turner
pointed to the Bucks for Brains program that is bringing researchers to
the state and with them the promise of new homegrown industries.
Steve
Roberts, president of the West Virginia Chamber of Commerce, said the
report overlooks the fact that all the coal mined in West Virginia is
being bought.
"We
have a history of seeing reports of the rapid decline in the use of coal,
and it simply hasn't happened," he said. "The marketplace has a large and
growing appetite for coal and electricity. As the national and
international economies recover in the future, there will be a larger need
for coal."
Cal
Kent, vice president of business and economic research at Marshall
University, also voiced that opinion.
Kent
said the report is well documented, but it offers little new material.
Everyone knows reserves are declining, and central Appalachian coal faces
competition from other regions and from alternate energy sources. However,
the report ignores the accelerating demand for electricity that will
require development of nuclear and alternate sources, Kent said.
"There
are not enough alternate sources now to replace coal over the next decade
or two," he said.
Everyone
recognizes the need to diversify the state economy, but no one has
developed a workable strategy that overcomes severe problems in
accomplishing that, Kent said.
The
state has little developable flat land, particularly in coal-producing
counties, he said. Installing the necessary infrastructure and
transportation arteries into those areas is expensive and time consuming.
The work force is older and less educated than the national average. And
the state has a reputation, whether deserved or not, of being an expensive
place to do business. That includes the perceived legal environment, he
said.
Researchers
at Marshall and West Virginia University are working on their own study of
coal in the state. It focuses on the industry's economic impact. Research
has been completed, and the document is in its final edit, Kent said, with
release set for mid-February.
"Most
folks will be surprised to find out how really dependent on coal the West
Virginia economy is," he said. |
Posted
Thursday, January 28, 2010 ; 06:00 AM | View
Comments | Post
Comment
Updated
Thursday, January 28, 2010; 11:05 AM
EPA
is considering whether material from power plants used in mine reclamation
is hazardous.
Story
by Pam Kasey Email | Bio
| Other
Stories by Pam Kasey
On
the eve of a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency decision about
regulating coal combustion waste as a hazardous material, mine operators
are spreading the substance extensively across north-central West
Virginia.
The
noncombustible part of coal, coal combustion waste (CCW) is what's left
when power plants burn coal to make electricity, according to the EPA. It
includes fly ash, boiler slag and scrubber residues.
Following
the December 2008 CCW slurry spill that covered 300 acres in Kingston,
Tenn., West Virginians learned of 20 such wet slurry impoundments in this
state.
But
CCW may be disposed of in other ways as well; in the absence of federal
regulation, practices differ state by state.
In
West Virginia, it may be landfilled.
It
may be recycled: into concrete, for example, or wallboard.
Or,
when written into a surface mine permit, its combination with coal mine
refuse during reclamation may be designated a "beneficial use" by the West
Virginia Department of Environmental Protection, according to the Division
of Mining and Reclamation's permitting handbook.
Meanwhile,
one coal company official said his company complies with regulatory
standards and he is concerned that increased standards needlessly could
increase the cost of energy.
CCW
and North-Central W.Va.
The
practice is widespread in north-central West Virginia.
The
simple idea behind it, according to Jeff Stant, is that the alkaline CCW
material neutralizes the highly acidic northern Appalachian coal wastes
and prevents acid mine drainage. Stant has studied CCW for two decades and
directs the nonprofit Environmental Integrity Project's Coal Combustion
Waste Initiative.
The
reality, Stant said, is much more complex.
A
2006 National Academy of Sciences study found that CCW contains "metals
and other elements, such as arsenic, cadmium, chromium and lead, in
quantities that can potentially be harmful to human health or the
environment."
Stant
cited research showing that, rather than offering a beneficial synergy,
the chemical interactions between acidic mine refuse and alkaline CCW
create ideal conditions for leaching the heavy metals from the ash.
"They're
creating a more dangerous scenario," Stant said. "They're maximizing
risk."
A
map in the National Academies study shows that north-central West Virginia
has by far the highest concentration of CCW mine placement in the country.
"Monongalia,
Marion and Preston counties, there are 80 or 90 mine dumps there," Stant
said. "Pennsylvania has more total mine dumps, about 120, but they're
spread over the western half of the state and the eastern anthracite
region. Yours are almost all in those three counties."
Two
Current Permits
Currently
in public comment are two draft permits in north-central West Virginia
that include CCW.
In
one, for Morgantown-based Patriot Mining Co.'s New Hill West surface mine
in the acidic Waynesburg seams, CCW from the Morgantown Energy Associates
power plant would be applied during reclamation.
Residents
John and Petra Wood, scientists who work in Morgantown and moved to nearby
Cassville 17 years ago for a more secluded lifestyle, submitted comments
on Patriot's Community Impact Statement and its draft Surface Mining
Control and Reclamation Act permit.
The
Cassville area has changed, the Woods wrote.
"Since
1997, almost 1,100 acres have been surface mined, and permit applications
for an additional 580 acres of surface disturbance recently have been
submitted for this area," they wrote.
"From
1999 to 2007, we estimate that about 6 million tons of CCW have been
deposited on seven surface mine permits ... in and around the Cassville
community," they wrote, summarizing their review of other permits. "An
additional 2.4 million tons of CCW is proposed for (the current permit)."
They
cited findings by the National Academies and others showing that CCW mine
sites leach heavy metals with potential human health effects and that
state-mandated surface water and groundwater monitoring typically are
insufficient.
They
also pointed out that CCW has been found to leach dissolved solids, or TDS
-- the contaminant that contributed to the death of the fish and mussels
on more than 38 miles of Dunkard Creek in their area last fall.
"Could
the millions of tons of CCW that have been deposited in the Monongahela
River watershed in recent years be contributing to TDS loading in the
river and its tributaries?" the Woods asked in their comments. "This needs
to be investigated, as the Monongahela River is the drinking water source
for 850,000 people (and has been) identified by the West Virginia Division
of Natural Resources as a high-quality stream."
The
second permit, for Morgantown-based Coresco LLC, is a surface mining
control and reclamation act permit -- but involves no mining.
"The
proposed Coal Refuse Disposal Area No. 4 will not include coal removal and
will strictly be a refuse disposal site," the applicant states.
Coresco
proposes to combine coal preparation refuse from its local mining
operation and CCW from the Hatfield's Ferry, Fort Martin and Longview
power plants on a 350-acre site near the Monongahela River.
The
company would deposit up to 2.8 million tons of material each year for 25
to 30 years to a final height, in one area, of up to 500 feet.
The
West Virginia chapter of the Sierra Club commented on this permit.
"There
does not appear to be any beneficial purpose to the disposal of the coal
ash and combustion byproducts," the comments read. "We recommend that the
beneficial use designation be determined to be inapplicable to this
permit, and that a solid waste landfill permit be required, complete with
liner, leachate collection and leachate leak detection systems."
Stant
placed the project in context.
"It's
a huge, a huge operation," he said. "(The completed project) is like
two-thirds of the entire annual national generation of coal combustion
waste from all power plants."
EPA
and OMB
A
"hazardous" designation from the EPA would trigger the development of a
federal disposal standard.
Tom
Jones, senior mining engineer at Patriot Mining, said he believes the
testing that Patriot conducts and that WVDEP requires is sufficient to
show that the company's use of CCW is in compliance with existing
regulations.
A
blanket hazardous designation would send CCW to landfills needlessly, he
said, and would increase Patriot's costs and, ultimately, the price of
electricity.
The
federal Office of Management and Budget currently is conducting meetings
with industry stakeholders.
At
issue are those additional costs, as well as whether a hazardous
designation would cripple re-use -- the destination of 45 percent of CCW
in 2008, according to the American Coal Ash Association, mine fills
included.
Stant
believes the designation would stop the use of CCW at mines.
"Minimum
requirements would have to be met that would force them to isolate the ash
from water," he said. "If they did that, that would spell the end of mine
filling as we currently know it."
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