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Twenty-seven groups call on DEQ to reject Dominion’s coal ash closure plan

earth-newIn a powerful display of collective concern, 27 conservation and public health organizations submitted a request today to Virginia’s Department of Environmental Quality asking Director David Paylor to reject Dominion Power’s closure plan for coal ash ponds at four sites in Virginia.

Organizations from across the Commonwealth, and several national groups, said that these sites present serious, ongoing pollution problems that pose a threat to the health of aquatic life and to Virginians’ enjoyment of the James and the Potomac, two of the Commonwealth’s most valued rivers.  At the Chesapeake Energy Center, Dominion’s own recent sampling results revealed arsenic in groundwater at more than 128 times Virginia’s groundwater protection standard.

The letter identifies North Carolina, Tennessee, and South Carolina as leaders in protecting drinking and recreational waters from the toxic waste created by power plants in those states.  In North Carolina, state regulators have sued Duke Energy’s subsidiaries for groundwater contamination and unpermitted seeps at fourteen coal ash sites across the state.  The state has also issued fines for ongoing violations of groundwater quality standards, including a fine at the Sutton power plant for $25 million – the largest fine ever in the state for environmental damages.  As a result of citizen and state efforts in South Carolina, utilities have committed to clean up every unlined waterfront coal ash storage site across the state.

Virginia will lag behind the protective measures taken by its neighbors if DEQ accepts Dominion’s proposal to place a cap on its ponds, the letter states.  “Dominion’s proposal to cap in place will not stop heavy metals and other toxic pollutants from leaking out of the sides and bottom of coal ash ponds right into waterbodies used to kayak, fish, and swim,” said Emily Russell of Virginia Conservation Network.  “There is no reason why Virginians should be asked to settle for perpetual pollution simply because it’s more cost-effective for Dominion’s bottom line.”

New coal ash rules finalized by EPA established a deadline for utilities to clean up their ash. That rule will go into effect in October of this year.  Dominion has begun cleanup efforts at one site, Possum Point near Dumfries, VA, in an attempt to avoid becoming subject to the new, more stringent cleanup standards.

 

Statement from Dominion Virginia Power spokesman Dan Genest: “The Environmental Protection Agency’s Coal Combustion Residual rules were developed after years of study, discussion and input from numerous organizations. They are designed to protect human health and the environment. The closure plan Dominion has sent to the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality for approval meets or exceeds the closure requirements set forth under CCR. Under the CCR rules, companies can take up to 15 years to comply with the rules and close their ponds. Many neighboring states and utilities are going the 15-year route. However, it is clear that EPA would prefer to have the ponds closed sooner rather than later.  For that reasons, we are proposing to close all of our ponds within 4 years.”

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