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PA
group takes on Army over nerve gas wastewater shipment
5/10/2007 1:00 PM
By
Marilyn Tennissen
A
Port Arthur environmental organization is taking on the Department of
Defense and the U.S. Army to try to stop shipments of nerve gas
wastewater from coming to Southeast Texas.
Last month, Veolia
Environmental Services began to receive wastewater from neutralized VX
nerve gas that it planned to incinerate at its Port Arthur facility.
The company has a $49 million federal contract to destroy almost 2
million of gallons of the wastewater.
The Community In-Power
Development Organization, a Port Arthur group founded by Hilton Kelley,
said no one in the community had been told the possibly toxic material
was being brought their neighborhood.
On May 8, CIDA and
Kelley were joined by The Sierra Club, the Chemical Weapons Working
Group, Citizens Against Incineration at Newport and other Port Arthur
plaintiffs in a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in the Southern
District of Indiana. Named as defendants are Secretary of Defense
Robert Gates, Secretary of the Army Pete Geren, the U.S. Department of
Defense, The U.S. Department of the Army and Veolia Environmental
Services Inc.
Kelley claims that the Port Arthur area already
has toxic levels of contaminates in the air from the nearby
petrochemical facilities and are now concerned about the emissions from
the Veolia waste incinerator.
"He and other community members
are concerned that transporting the Newport Army Chemical Depot VX
hydrolysate to his community would worsen existing pollultion-related
health problems in Port Arthur," the plaintiffs' original petition
states. "He is concerned that VX nerve agent hydrolysate has never been
incinerated anywhere, much less in the city of Port Arthur."
The
VX is turned into wastewater at Newport Chemical Agent Disposal
Facility in Newport, Ind. and tested for any activity before being
shipped to Texas. Arriving at Veolia, the hydrolysate is compressed out
of tanker trucks with nitrogen into holding tanks where mixed with
water and other low toxicity chemicals to create a blend for
incineration.
The blend is then sent through closed pipelines to
the 1,400 degree incinerator where the gas elements of the wastewater
are separated out and sent to a secondary combustion unit where it is
heated further to 2,100 degrees. There most of the organic compounds
are incinerated.
Ashes from the incinerator are the only solid
product that remains and those are shipped to a hazardous material
landfill in Lake Charles, La.
But Kelley and other plaintiffs
say the military has not sufficiently studied the danger that an
accident or terrorist attack could mean to residents along the
1,000-mile route from Indiana to Southeast Texas.
The plaintiffs
are asking a federal judge to stop the shipments to Port Arthur long
enough to allow more studies on the transportation and incineration of
the wastewater.
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