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Wildlife at Risk - Adding pollutants to atmosphere will have a major impact on animals
Thursday, 11 February 2010 15:51

Published in the Star News on Wed. Feb. 10, 2010

Dr. Michael A. Mallin, Center for Marine Science, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Dr. Lawrence B. Cahoon, Department of Biology and Marine Biology, University of North Carolina Wilmington

 

The proposal for Titan Industries to build a new cement manufacturing plant along the shores of the Northeast Cape Fear River brings with it the potential for increased air and water pollution to our area, as well as increased risks to human health from air quality impacts. What has had little exposure thus far is the strong likelihood of serious pollution impacts to local fish and wildlife. Titan will utilize a coal-fired kiln to burn limestone, producing both air and water pollution. Pollutants in particular from this source that will especially impact our wildlife include mercury, arsenic and selenium.

 

During 2004-2005 Dr. Mallin’s laboratory was funded by the North Carolina Attorney General’s Office to conduct a survey of potential pollutants in the flesh of freshwater fish and clams in the Cape Fear, Black, and Northeast Cape Fear River basins. The findings were surprising in that they showed that several pollutants exceeded the US EPA and North Carolina Health Director’s standards for safe human consumption. These pollutants included mercury, arsenic, selenium, cadmium, PCBs and several pesticides. The first three, as mentioned, are by-products of coal burning, and coal burning power plants are the largest source of mercury to our atmosphere.

 

Mercury exists in several forms, but even benign forms can be converted to the most toxic form, called methyl mercury. One could not find a more ideal location for the conversion of airborne mercury to methyl mercury than the swampy forests along the banks of the Northeast Cape Fear River. The conversion to the toxic mercury form is most effective in places where the water is acidic, bacteria are abundant, and there is plenty of dissolved organic carbon, the natural material that gives the river and creek water its dark coloration. Once in the water, and in the sediments under the water, methyl mercury enters the food chain. It is taken up by microbes, algae and other plankton, which are eaten by aquatic insects, snails and clams, which are eaten by fish, which are eaten by larger fish, and so on. At each step up the food chain mercury becomes more concentrated, a process called biomagnification. Fish, of course, are eaten by birds, forest wildlife and humans.

 

Unfortunately mercury levels in several species of our freshwater fish and clams are already at levels exceeding standards for safe human consumption. Thus, adding more mercury to the mix will cause more fish farther down the food chain to be added to the non-consumption list. Arsenic and selenium are by-products of coal burning that are also at levels in freshwater fish and clams that are unsafe for eating. Not only are these polluting metals a danger to humans but they are at or near levels in the fish known to pose a danger to the wildlife themselves, such as reduced reproduction or higher disease susceptibility. We need to remember that while humans can avoid eating pollutant-contaminated fish, the birds, mammals and alligators in our waters cannot.

 

The entire Cape Fear area is required by the US EPA to prepare a plan called a total maximum daily load (TMDL), which means our State regulatory agencies have to reduce mercury entering our streams and wildlife. Adding to the load by allowing increased air and water pollution from a new cement plant is a big step backward. A healthy step for our environment was announced recently by Progress Energy, which is taking the initiative to replace the Sutton coal burning power plant and other coal-burning facilities with power generation that uses natural gas. This is a much cleaner fuel and will lead to less air and water pollution, as well as a reduction in global-warming causing greenhouse gases to our atmosphere. Let us follow that positive lead by further reducing our pollutant load on our wildlife, rather than increasing it.


 
News Flash: Comment Period on Titan Permit Extended
Tuesday, 06 October 2009 00:54

 

Wilmington, N.C., N.C Coastal Federation - The N.C. Division of Air Quality has agreed to extend the comment period for Titan America's draft air permit until Nov. 20. The period for public comments had been scheduled to end Oct. 30.
 
The N.C. Coastal Federation and the Southern Environmental Law Center had made separate requests to the Keith Overcash, the division's director, to extend the original 45-day period for public comments on Titan's controversial proposal to build a cement kiln and strip mine near Wilmington. The federation had urged the state to extend the permit until Nov. 30 to allow more time for citizens to prepare comments after the public hearings on the draft permit. Those hearings are scheduled for Oct. 20 in Wilmington.

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Press Release: Coastal Federation Requests Governor to Take Action on Titan E-mail
Friday, 12 June 2009 00:25

PRESS RELEASE - For immediate release, June 9th, 2009
Contact: Mike Giles
Phone: 910-790-3275
Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Wilmington--- The N.C. Coastal Federation asked Gov. Beverly Perdue today to delay state permits on a proposed cement plant near Wilmington until a federal study on its environmental effects is completed.

 

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Senator Boseman Introduces Moratorium
Friday, 20 March 2009 12:52

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 20th 

Contact: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
1-800-852-5593

Sen. Julia Boseman Introduces MORATORIUM on Cement Plant Permits!

Echoing a growing chorus of public opposition to the proposed Titan cement plant in Castle Hayne, Senator Julia Boseman introduced a bill today calling for an 18-month moratorium on cement plant permits in North Carolina. Senate Bill 699 calls for a legislative study commission to research all the impacts of cement plants before any permits are issued. A public hearing on the bill has been scheduled for Tuesday, March 24, at 11 AM. A bus-load of Titan opponents will be there to lend their support.

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Charlotte Comes Out Against Titan
Tuesday, 10 March 2009 20:19

 

The Charlotte Observer, the state’s largest and perhaps most influential newspaper, has come out with a strongly worded editorial against the proposed Titan cement plant near Wilmington, NC. The paper’s editorial board weighed the alleged benefits against the significant impacts the project will have on our region’s fisheries, wetlands and coastal resources: “The 160 or so permanent jobs Titan America would bring to the Cape Fear region are not worth the potential damage the plant could do to an area that attracts tourists, boaters, retirees and residents from around the world.”

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