SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -- The U.S. Army has begun the
final phase of a munitions destruction project in Utah's west desert --
draining and incinerating the first of thousands of containers of mustard gas
held in storage. Begun Friday, the project at the Deseret Chemical
Depot will last six to 10 years. It involves burning about 6,200 tons of liquid
blister agent and is complicated by the presence of an estimated 800 pound of
toxic mercury. At one time, the Tooele County depot housed more
chemical weapons than any other storage site in the United States. To comply
with the international Chemical Weapons Convention, the U.S. government began
weapons destruction at the facility in 1996. Mustard gas, which is a liquid at room temperature,
was first used during World War I. The agent causes severe blisters, internal
and external bleeding and strips the mucus membranes from airways. Those
exposed to it may have an increased risk of cancer and birth defects. Workers will first drain and incinerate the 1-ton
mustard gas containers with low concentrations of mercury, depot spokeswoman
Alaine Southworth said. Workers will also design and install
sulfer-impregnated carbon filers to scrub mercury from the exhaust when
containers with higher concentrations are disposed of, she said. Vanessa Pierce, director of Healthy Environment
Alliance of Utah, wonders if the technology will work. She said the Army should
follow the mustard gas disposal methods used at other facilities where the gas
is neutralized with plain water. "It still has to be treated as a hazardous waste,
but there is no risk of hazardous contaminants getting into our air,"
Pierce said. Southworth said the Army feels the technologies are
equal but finds incineration more effective. The Tooele incinerator has already
successfully disposed of 7,400 tons of other nerve agents, she said. Southworth estimated nor more than one to two pounds
of mercury would be released during the incineration process. Mercury is a highly toxic element that is found
naturally in the environment and introduced through activity like coal burning
and minerals processing. Concentrations of mercury in its organic form,
methylmercury, can harm the human nervous system and cause developmental and
neurological ailments in young children and fetuses. In 2005, scientists found the Great Salt Lake
contained some of the highest concentrations of methylmercury in the United
States.
Associated
Press
August 19th, 2006 @ 6:25pm