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Tag: Dioxins

Manchester, New Hampshire Municipal Waste Incinerator to Reduce Mercury Emissions Under Settlement with United State

 

BOSTON – The City of Manchester, New Hampshire, will install equipment to limit the amount of mercury pollution emitted from a city-owned incinerator under an agreement between the city, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Department of Justice. The city estimates it will spend more than $6 million to comply with the terms of this settlement, which includes installing and operating pollution control equipment at the incinerator.

 

"This agreement means cleaner air for communities in Manchester and improves the city's compliance with important clean air laws," said EPA New England Regional Administrator Alexandra Dunn. "EPA is committed to working with cities like Manchester to reduce air pollution from sewage sludge incinerators in order to protect public health."

 

The consent decree lodged in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Hampshire, provides a July 11, 2019 deadline, for the facility to commence operation of a mercury control system, and requires that the facility meet all other related Clean Air Act regulations by January 12, 2020. In the interim, Manchester will take measures to limit the mercury content of sewage sludge received at the incinerator. The facility will also pay a civil penalty of $131,800.

 

The City of Manchester sewage sludge incinerator processes sewage waste from Manchester and three neighboring communities. Incineration of sewage sludge results in emissions of various pollutants, including mercury, dioxins and furans, cadmium, lead, and carbon monoxide.

 

Under federal Clean Air Act rules that became effective in 2016, owners of sewage sludge incinerators must meet stringent emissions standards for 10 pollutants, must test their emissions, and must institute procedures to limit emissions. The Manchester facility failed to meet the compliance deadline for mercury emissions and for various other requirements of the rules. The City of Manchester worked with EPA on the compliance plan and schedule, set forth in the proposed consent decree, which are designed to ensure it complies with the emissions standards for all 10 pollutants.

 

More information:

EPA Announces $10.1 Million St. Louis Area of Concern Cleanup

 

CHICAGO - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) today announced a $10.1 million Great Lakes cleanup in Duluth, Minnesota. The projects will focus on the Minnesota Slip near the downtown Duluth waterfront and Slips 3 and C in the Duluth Harbor. This is part of a larger effort to restore the St. Louis River Area of Concern through the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative.

 

“The Duluth slip cleanups demonstrate the commitment of EPA’s Great Lakes Restoration Initiative to clean up legacy pollution, working in cooperation with industries, states, and local agencies,” said EPA Regional Administrator Cathy Stepp.

 

“These cleanups, and really the entire St. Louis River Area of Concern project, are a great example of how local-state-federal partnership and cooperation is supposed to work to protect the environment and human health,” said MPCA Commissioner John Linc Stine.

 

The three projects will result in the remediation of approximately 154,000 cubic yards of polluted sediment contaminated with heavy metals, dioxins, PCBs, and polyaromatic hydrocarbons, or PAHs. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is assisting the two agencies.

 

In October and November of this year, the Minnesota Slip cleanup will result in the remediation of about 37,000 cubic yards of contaminated sediment. Project activities include moving 2,500 cubic yards of mud within the slip to level the slip bottom and allow for its continued use. Contaminated sediment will be capped with 2 feet of dredged material from clean areas of the harbor along with a layer of stone. The cap will isolate contaminants and protect against damage from boat traffic.

 

The project will cost $6.5 million, including in-kind contributions of $3.6 million from MPCA in partnership with the city of Duluth and Duluth Entertainment Convention Center. These in-kind contributions will help fund required dock wall stabilization and allow for the temporary relocation of the SS William A. Irvin. The retired freighter is scheduled to move this September and return to the Minnesota Slip next spring.

 

Slips 3 and C will undergo a $3.5 million cleanup this fall. More than 116,000 cubic yards of contaminated sediment will be capped with approximately 2 feet of dredged material from clean areas of the harbor along with a layer of stone.

 

The St. Louis River and Bay is one of 27 U.S. areas of concern targeted for cleanup under the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative and the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement. Since 2016, more than $125 million has been committed to restore the AOC, including the $75 million Spirit Lake cleanup of the former Duluth Works site announced last week.

 

For more information: https://www.epa.gov/great-lakes-legacy-act/epa-begins-cleanup-activities-harbor-slips-port-duluth

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