August 15, 2010 8:06 PM

Coal Ash: 130 Million Tons of Waste

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  We burn so much coal in this country for electricity that every year that process generates 130 million tons of waste. Most of it is coal ash, and it contains some nasty stuff. Environmental scientists tell us that the concentrations of mercury, arsenic, lead and other toxic metals are considerably higher in coal ash than in ordinary soil.

When coal ash is disposed of in dry, lined impoundments it is said to be safe. But it's often dumped into wet ponds - there are nearly 500 of them across the country - and in those cases the ash could pose health risks to the nearby communities.

Jim Roewer, one of the top lobbyists for the power industry, told 60 Minutes correspondent Lesley Stahl that nearly half of the electricity in the United States is generated by coal.

"Coal's gonna be around for a long time," he said.

"We really can't get rid of coal," Stahl remarked.

"We shouldn't get rid of coal," Roewer said.

"Well, should or shouldn't, we can't. And coal makes waste. Would you say that the industry has done a good job of disposing of the coal ash waste?" Stahl asked.

"We can do better," Roewer said.

Asked if that means no, Roewer told Stahl, "Well, we had a Kingston spill."

That's Kingston, Tenn., where last December a giant retention pool of coal ash buckled under the weight of five decades of waste.

A billion gallons of muck shot into the Emory River like a black tsunami, engulfing homes, uprooting trees, and throwing fish out of the water.

Residents woke up to an apocalyptic moonscape of "ashbergs" everywhere. The spill was 100 times larger than the Exxon Valdez and it was all coal ash.

Stahl had never heard of coal ash before the Kingston incident.

"Wasn't a problem," Roewer remarked.

"Well, it was a problem, we just didn't know," Stahl replied.

The problem is: where do you put all that stuff? The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) dumped up to 1,000 tons of coal ash every day into a wet pond near the plant, slowly amassing a waste-cake 60 feet high. Some of the ingredients, according to the EPA, were arsenic, lead, mercury, selenium, cadmium and other toxic metals.

"You know, some people say that this is a poisoned meadow," Stahl said to Leo Francendese, an environmental "Mr. Fix It," sent by the EPA to clean up this mess.

"In the wrong circumstances coal ash is dangerous. Breathing it, that's dangerous," Francendese replied.

The summer heat can bake the ash into a fine talc-like powder that can wreak havoc on your lungs.

So while the government has never formally labeled coal ash a hazardous waste, it's being treated as such at the Kingston site.

As the 60 Minutes team left the site, they were scrubbed clean, as was their car.

Francendese explained that every vehicle that exits the site must go through the cleaning process.

Gary Topmiller lives right on the river. He had a front row seat when the spill covered his dock.

"Now what the doctors did tell me was, 'Get out of there.' And I said, 'I don't have any place to go,'" Topmiller told Stahl.



Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 102 Comments
by sciline January 26, 2012 5:12 PM EST
I would aver that nothing will prove more precisely the old Maxim: "What goes around, comes around" than the fact that what, we now, and have allowed to be Sprayed on our Crops, Spilled onto our Land -including the run-off from our crops, Spewed into our Air, Buried in our Soil or Poured Down our Drains, will soon be seen, smelt and tasted, in that order, as it comes back at us out of our spigots. Count on it!
The fact that the entire economy of states like Kentucky and West Virginia is based in coal, with all of its polluting(coal ash)after products, gives credence to the sociopathic credo of the corporate "special interests": "Better no planet at all than a planet of the unemployed!"
Believe what you will, but there is no such thing as, nor will there ever be, "Clean Coal".
Tom Nass,
5th Marine Division - WWII
Reply to this comment
by MH_4CoalAshRecyling April 23, 2010 12:33 PM EDT
For FACTUAL information on coal ash, please visit: www.acaa-usa.org
For FACTUAL information on coal ash, please visit: www.acaa-usa.org

EPA: No public threat from Battlefield Golf Club fly ash
Release date: 04/22/2010

(PHILADELPHIA ? April 22, 2010) ? Residential wells near the Battlefield Golf Club in Chesapeake, Va. have not been impacted by the fly ash used to contour the golf course according to a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency site inspection report issued today. Additionally, the report concludes no adverse health effects are expected from exposure to surface water or sediments on the site.
Reply to this comment
by MH_4CoalAshRecyling April 23, 2010 12:28 PM EDT
For FACTUAL information on coal ash, please visit: www.acaa-usa.org

EPA: No public threat from Battlefield Golf Club fly ash
Release date: 04/22/2010

(PHILADELPHIA ? April 22, 2010) ? Residential wells near the Battlefield Golf Club in Chesapeake, Va. have not been impacted by the fly ash used to contour the golf course according to a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency site inspection report issued today. Additionally, the report concludes no adverse health effects are expected from exposure to surface water or sediments on the site.
Reply to this comment
by bkwaas October 12, 2009 2:06 PM EDT
The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) ? an unbiased authority dedicated to protecting the environment has a very useful review of coal fly ash (http://www.nrdc.org/energy/coalwaste/default.asp) and its toxicity.

NRDC categorizes coal fly ash as a Contaminated Coal Waste

NRDC states ?toxic material is laced throughout? the fly ash

NRDC states ?Coal ash contains many toxic metals, including arsenic, which unchecked, can leak into ground water and be extremely hazardous to breathe?

NRDC states that coal ash ?is contaminated by 10 metals classified as toxic by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR): Antimony, Arsenic, Beryllium, Cadmium, Chromium, Cobalt, Lead, Manganese, Mercury, Nickel and Selenium.?

NRDCs states ?Coal-fired power plants produced more than 126 million tons of contaminated coal waste?

It also states ?the waste produced in a single year contains nearly 100,000 tons of toxic metals?

This is the waste that Calstar wants to make bricks of and sell to unsuspecting consumers.

Bricks that are laced with toxic metals.

Toxic metals that leach out from the bricks ? according to Calstar?s own data.

Calstar would like people to believe that the toxicity of fly ash is not an issue.

Calstar would like people to believe that bricks made from a Contaminated Coal Waste laced with toxic metals are not an issue.

Calstar would lke people to believe that it is ?beneficially recycling? toxic fly ash and producing a ?Green? product.

How is a product that is laced with toxic metals ?Beneficial?? Beneficial for lining Calstar?s managements pockets?

How is a product that is laced with toxic metals that leach out ?Green?? Is polluting the environment and poisoning people with a contaminated waste the new ?Green?? Perhaps the ?Green? is the money Calstar is hoping to make from selling the toxic bricks.

Does the management of Calstar have any decency?

Calstar ? a company bereft of morals, trying to sell the new Asbestos.
Reply to this comment
by MH_4CoalAshRecyling April 23, 2010 12:28 PM EDT
For FACTUAL information on coal ash, please visit: www.acaa-usa.org

EPA: No public threat from Battlefield Golf Club fly ash
Release date: 04/22/2010

(PHILADELPHIA ? April 22, 2010) ? Residential wells near the Battlefield Golf Club in Chesapeake, Va. have not been impacted by the fly ash used to contour the golf course according to a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency site inspection report issued today. Additionally, the report concludes no adverse health effects are expected from exposure to surface water or sediments on the site.
by bkwaas October 7, 2009 5:08 PM EDT
Unscrupulous companies are trying to Greenwash fly ash and profit from this hazardous waste.

Calstar Products is trying to sell coal fly ash bricks - the company is claiming that the bricks are safe, but their own results show that they leach toxins like arsenic, antimony, beryllium, cadmium, lead, manganese, mercury and nickel.

These crooks are going to poison people - their fly ash bricks are going to be the next asbestos.

See the following links:

http://techpulse360.com/2008/10/23/reader-comments-on-fly-ash-brick-toxicity-cal-star-hype/

http://www.greentechmedia.com/green-light/post/here-comes-the-green-brick-664/

http://news.cnet.com/8301-11128_3-10359630-54.html

http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/inside-the-green-brick-house/
Reply to this comment
by MH_4CoalAshRecyling April 23, 2010 12:28 PM EDT
For FACTUAL information on coal ash, please visit: www.acaa-usa.org

EPA: No public threat from Battlefield Golf Club fly ash
Release date: 04/22/2010

(PHILADELPHIA ? April 22, 2010) ? Residential wells near the Battlefield Golf Club in Chesapeake, Va. have not been impacted by the fly ash used to contour the golf course according to a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency site inspection report issued today. Additionally, the report concludes no adverse health effects are expected from exposure to surface water or sediments on the site.
by afmcalax October 6, 2009 9:37 AM EDT
All toxic waste in America should be forced into Republican districts since they are always so sure that their fake, economic driven science is more reliable than real, rational science. But if you notice most of the toxic waste generated is usually dumped by rich, white Republican-leaning owned companies into poor, minority Democratic-leaning neighborhoods. If these conservative Republicans are so sure of their science then white areas of the deep south should be designated the only allowable dumping grounds.
Reply to this comment
by mrredskin October 7, 2009 1:53 AM EDT
genius... absolute genius, afmcalax.

your comment had absolutely nothing to do with this topic. lovely, racist remarks, too.
by MH_4CoalAshRecyling April 23, 2010 12:29 PM EDT
For FACTUAL information on coal ash, please visit: www.acaa-usa.org

EPA: No public threat from Battlefield Golf Club fly ash
Release date: 04/22/2010

(PHILADELPHIA ? April 22, 2010) ? Residential wells near the Battlefield Golf Club in Chesapeake, Va. have not been impacted by the fly ash used to contour the golf course according to a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency site inspection report issued today. Additionally, the report concludes no adverse health effects are expected from exposure to surface water or sediments on the site.
by mrredskin October 6, 2009 2:13 AM EDT
wow, props to CBS for only showing one side of the story: what everyone WANTS to hear. I love the line under the photo with the house that says the whole town of Kingston was flooded with coal ash. The spill affected TWELVE families and their homes/yard. Let's not forget the fact that they CHOSE to live next to fly ash ponds. Very desirable...

Seriously, epic fail for CBS on this. Journalism at it's worst. They didn't bother showing the video that was taken on Sept 25th as to how much of it has been cleaned up.

And to whomever it was that said they received letters 3 times already stating their rates increased because of the spill, you're full of crap.

CBS will never get another minute of my time, except for football games. The "news" is a joke.
Reply to this comment
by gabbyur24 October 5, 2009 11:19 PM EDT
Obama said he would "follow the Science"; the leading climate scientist in the world, Dr James Hansen NASA demonstrated in Coal River WV against Obama's Mountaintop Removal position. Look it up. Robert Kennedy Jr has written Op Ed pieces against what Obama is doing to Appalachia. Our government is committing genocide against those helpless, poor, uneducated people. Heavy metals are causing chronic diseases like cancer, asthma, diabetes, silicosis, birth defects, etc. The coal industry has tried to blame this on incest for a hundred years. Like the tobacco industry had its smoking gun, the coal industry knows they are poisoning those people and so does Obama and the Congress. I voted for Obama and he stabbed us all in the back. WV is at the top of every negative list and the bottom of every positive one because of mountaintop removal mining, and the news media is letting the government get away with it. If coal is so good for WV's economy, why is it the poorest, sickest state in the union? McDowell Co is the 8th poorest county in the country out of over 5000 counties! Get real! Shame on you 60 Minutes for not bringing this to the attention of the country before this. Those people will live with the fall out of this for the next hundred years. Obama can stop it and he should have immediately.
Reply to this comment
by MH_4CoalAshRecyling April 23, 2010 12:29 PM EDT
For FACTUAL information on coal ash, please visit: www.acaa-usa.org

EPA: No public threat from Battlefield Golf Club fly ash
Release date: 04/22/2010

(PHILADELPHIA ? April 22, 2010) ? Residential wells near the Battlefield Golf Club in Chesapeake, Va. have not been impacted by the fly ash used to contour the golf course according to a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency site inspection report issued today. Additionally, the report concludes no adverse health effects are expected from exposure to surface water or sediments on the site.
by bessr October 5, 2009 9:26 PM EDT
The coal fly ash story was very timely for what is happening in the small rural town of Dendron, VA where I live. Old Dominion Electric Cooperative is planning to place a 1,500 mega-watt coal burning power plant within our town limits. The plant would be situated just yards from the homes of Dendron residents, and about two miles from the Surry County Schools complex. ODEC plans to landfill the fly ash in the town on land bordering the Blackwater River. EPA should tighten restrictions as soon as possible.
Reply to this comment
by bubbadubba October 5, 2009 8:45 PM EDT
That would be the same coal used to produce electricity used to transmit CBS shows, power CBS offices, and power the TV's for people who watch CBS?
Yea, I thought so. The very same coal.
H Y P O C R I T E S.
Reply to this comment
by MH_4CoalAshRecyling April 23, 2010 12:29 PM EDT
For FACTUAL information on coal ash, please visit: www.acaa-usa.org

EPA: No public threat from Battlefield Golf Club fly ash
Release date: 04/22/2010

(PHILADELPHIA ? April 22, 2010) ? Residential wells near the Battlefield Golf Club in Chesapeake, Va. have not been impacted by the fly ash used to contour the golf course according to a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency site inspection report issued today. Additionally, the report concludes no adverse health effects are expected from exposure to surface water or sediments on the site.
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