Environment News Service (ENS)
ENS logo
Waste Spills From a Second TVA Coal-Fired Power Plant
STEVENSON, Alabama, January 9, 2009 (ENS) - The Tennessee Valley Authority has had a second waste spill in three weeks at one of its coal-fired power plants.

A 10,000 gallon leak of process water from the gypsum pond at the Widows Creek Fossil Plant in Stevenson, Alabama was discovered just before dawn this morning. TVA officials say the leak has stopped.

"The leak from the gypsum pond flowed into an adjacent settling pond," the federal electric utility said in a statement this morning. "Some material overflowed into Widows Creek, although most of the leakage remained in the settling pond."

Gypsum ponds hold limestone spray from TVA's scrubbers that clean sulfur dioxide from coal-plant emissions. Gypsum contains calcium sulfate, which is used in drywall, a commercially sold construction material.

Widows Creek Fossil Plant, named for the creek that flows through the plant site, is located on Guntersville Reservoir on the Tennessee River in northeast Alabama.

TVA notified federal and state authorities and has deployed containment booms on Widows Creek to trap the contaminated water. The utility says it will perform temporary repairs to the pond.

TVA's Widows Creek Fossil Plant in northeastern Alabama (Photo courtesy TVA)

Alabama Department of Environmental Management spokesman Scott Hughes told ENS that the agency has a crew on the scene monitoring Widows Creek for effects of the spill on aquatic organisms in the creek.

"At noon there was no sign of impact to aquatic organisms," he said.

The city of Scottsboro about 15 miles downstream from the Widows Creek Fossil Plant uses the Tennessee River as drinking water. Hughes explained that any contamination from the spill has not had time to reach this community.

ADEM personnel will provide oversight to ensure cleanup is done in a timely manner, said Hughes.

The eight coal-fired units at Widows Creek generate about 10 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity a year, enough to supply 650,000 homes. The plant consumes some 10,000 tons of coal a day.

This leak is the second at a TVA coal-fired power plant in the past three weeks. On December 22, a retaining wall broke at the TVA's Kingston Fossil power plant in eastern Tennessee's Roane County, about 100 miles to the northeast of Widows Creek. A billion gallons of coal ash sludge spilled into the Emory River and across 400 acres of the surrounding farm and residential neighborhood.

"Even as residents in Roane County Tennessee are still trying to grasp the full impact of the Kingston disaster, communities in northeastern Alabama are now threatened with a new toxic coal waste spill," said Bruce Nilles, director of the Sierra Club's National Coal Campaign.

"While initial accounts indicate that this latest spill is smaller than the Tennessee disaster, we hope that TVA and EPA have learned from the Tennessee disaster and move quickly to protect residents," said Nilles.

John Wathen, an Alabama resident with Hurricane Creekkeeper, was in Tennessee taking stock of the Kingston disaster when he heard about today's spill.

"If this don't stick a finger in the whole clean coal myth, then I don't know what will," said Wathen.

Coal waste can contain harmful substances including lead, mercury and arsenic.

Once spilled, the toxins from the waste can leak into soil and water, putting people who come in contact with the contamination at risk for health problems.

"Shockingly, coal waste is largely unregulated in Alabama," said Gil Rogers, staff attorney for the Southern Environmental Law Center in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

"Alabamans deserve straight answers from the Alabama Department of Environmental Management about how it's handling this waste stream at TVA's Widow Creek plant and if any corrective action procedures are in place to deal with it.

ADEM's Hughes told ENS, "We inspect all these facilities on an annual basis. Our focus is to ensure the water discharged from these impoundments comply with their National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permits. The lastest inspection at Widows Creek took place on May 21, 2008, and Hughes says inspectors found no violations.

"Clearly current regulations are not adequate," said Nilles. "We need the Environmental Protection Agency to start regulating coal ash before more communities are put at risk."

Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2009. All rights reserved.

 

From Shock to Taking Stock: Celebrating 50 years of Successful Sea Turtle Conservation Give Peas a Chance – Pulses Offer Improved Sustainability in the Field and on the Plate EarthSure's "AirRay™ Auto" Applications Open for 2010 Cohort of Kinship Conservation Fellows Dr. Samuel Epstein's 20 Year Fight Against Biotech, Cancer-Causing Milk CO2 Detector Warns You When Indoor Air is Bad Safeguarding the Sun’s Energy With EarthSure's Solar Alarm System California, Midwest Would Gain Jobs from Greater Government Investment in Green Transit Buses Teanaway Solar Reserve: An Engine for Economic Growth and New Jobs Canadian Forestry Leader Urges Ambitious Global Action to End Deforestation Le Secteur Forestier Canadien Preconise Des Mesures Ambitieuses a L'Echelle Mondiale Pour Faire Cesser la Deforestation EarthSure's SolarCure Giving a Gift That Benefits the World Southwest Airlines Debuts 'Green Plane' With Environmentally Friendly Interior Materials Hormones in U.S. Beef Linked to Increased Cancer Risk Critigen Debuts; Serves as Global Catalyst to Modernize Critical Infrastructure EarthSure's "Dynamic Duo": the World's New Heroes in Renewable Energy Cancer Expert Counters Reckless Claims That Hormonal Milk Is Safe U.S. Postal Service Advances Toward Sustainable Future International Model Named Goodwill Ambassador For Wildlife Foundation Biodiesel Returns More Energy to the Earth Than Ever, Study Finds Ten Years of Green Investing and Financial Performance Obama Told Only "Robust and Effective Federal Effort" Can Ensure "Coastal Louisiana's Survival" Wi-Fi U-SNAP Module Now Available From Intwine Connect Top Green Jobs During the Recession Micronutrients, a Division of Heritage Technologies, LLC was Recently Featured on 'Green Magazine TV' on the Discovery Channel for Its Sustainability Efforts Procter & Gamble Products Featured on 'Green Magazine TV' on the Discovery Channel for Their Sustainability Efforts Unrecognized Cancer and Hormonal Risks of Avon Products United GREEN to Provide Expert Moderator for GreenEnergyTalk.org Open Forum 48 Environmental Groups Receive 2009 TogetherGreen Innovation Grants GreenEnergyTalk.org Launches Public Green Information Discussion Board Cancer: The Health Risk Behind the Cosmeceutical Mask Shark Savers Launches Worldwide "Thank You" to Palau for Protecting Sharks PayItGreen Introduces New Membership Program Second Episode of 'Green Magazine TV' to Air on the Discovery Channel in November The World Bank Group-led Initiative To Be Featured on 'Green Magazine TV' Enterprise Rose Fellowship in Community Architecture Announces New Fellows in Los Angeles and Chicago Risks & Opportunities of Climate and Environmental Change Explored by Leading International Experts & Executives in New DVD/Web Program for Businesses Association Services of Florida Commends Jessica Lindley’s Volunteer Efforts at the Miami-Dade Parks and Recreation International Coastal Cleanup World's First Green Hotels Directory Launched PR Newswire and World-Wire Join Forces to Showcase Environmentally-Focused News and Events
WW TRANSMIT
 

License ENS News
for websites and newsletters

Send a news story to ENS editors

Upload environmental news videos

Share ENS stories with the world