Showing posts with label oil spill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil spill. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Superfund Site, But No Cleanup Necessary


By: Duane Craig
Perhaps in a case of the federal government bending over a bit too far at a state’s request, the Portland Harbor Oil Superfund site may not get a cleanup with federal dollars, according to this article. The reason is because after closer scrutiny, the pollution isn’t serious enough, and the local fish aren’t plentiful or old enough to warrant a cleanup.

An oil spill from storage tanks owned by Harbor Oil in 1974 was the first warning shot of a minor disaster unfolding. That incident killed the fish in Force Lake. Then, just five years later, a massive fire melted five oil storage tanks. Nearly 100,000 gallons of petroleum products spilled into the lake and fouled its wetlands.

Polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, are the biggest threat to life at the 19-acre site with levels at 2,000 parts per billion. However, the current owner has paved over the contamination, effectively capping it to prevent precipitation from disbursing it. The lake’s sediment has been found to have PCBs at 80 parts per billion. The EPA believes the greatest threats to humans now lie with eating fish from the lake because PCBs are classed as bioaccumulative, meaning they concentrate in living tissue.

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Yellowstone Crude Spill Sparks More Landowner Lawsuits

By: Duane Craig

Landowners in Eastern Montana have filed a lawsuit against Exxon Mobil Corp. for property damage from last year’s crude oil spill that contaminated the Yellowstone River. The landowners claim damage to their property and livestock from exposure to the oil, and also claim Exxon had ample opportunity to shut down the pipeline and prevent the spill altogether. Another lawsuit by a separate group of landowners is pending.

A section of the pipeline that was installed in 1991 had been scoured by flooding over the years which eventually caused it to fail and spill 1,500 barrels of crude oil, investigators surmised. Officials from one town had warned Exxon about the risks on several occasions. Still, the company continued flowing oil through the pipeline even when flooding was predicted, according to the suit. Other pipeline operators had shut down their lines under the same circumstances.

The spill contaminated about 70 miles of Yellowstone’s banks causing more damage to property than all other accidents in Montana during the past 10 years. You can get more details on the story here, and here.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Tales of Irene and Fuel Contamination

By: Duane Craig

Flooding in NY Subway
Residents in the lower Hudson River area of New York discovered fuel-laden water in their basements after the heavy rains from tropical storm Irene. The fuel is thought to have originated at a nearby heating, ventilation and air conditioner contractor that also has fuel delivery operations, according to this report in lohud.com.

Environmental Conservationists investigating fuel spill


The smelly water was being pumped out of basements in Sloatsburg, New York by the local fire department while the state Department of Environmental Conservation investigated the cause of the spill. Immediately after the incident it was being assumed that storm water rose above the containment wall around the fuel facility and when combined with high winds jostled some tankers causing them to leak.

But, according to a report in NorthJersey.com the Ramapo River in New Jersey was also affected as an estimated 10,000 gallons of diesel and home heating oil leaked into that waterway from the same fuel storage and delivery facility. The facility stores up to 30,000 gallons of various fuels at any time. Other reports placed a 3,000 gallon tank and another 500 gallon tank in the nearby woods where observers said the smell of gasoline was so strong they couldn't stay in the area more than a few minutes. One of those tanks bore the markings of the same fuel facility.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Enbridge Offers to Buy 200 Michigan Oil Spill Homes; Evacuation, Restrictions Still in Place

August 4, 2010 - The oil spill in Marshall that dumped over one million gallons of oil into the Kalamazoo River has been contained, reported the Environmental Protection Agency earlier this week, but cleanup will likely take months.

Calhoun and Kalamazoo counties have not yet lifted restrictions on the river area: signs are posted along the riverbanks prohibiting all swimming, boating and fishing; the water is not to be used for irrigation or water for animals; and residents are still encouraged to stay away from the area as much as possible due to benzene levels in the air.

For area dog owners, this may mean finding a new place for daily walks or even boarding the dog elsewhere until the restrictions are lifted. The 61 homes surrounding the original spill area are still under a voluntary evacuation order.

More...

MD Wells Run Hit With Oil Contamination

August 3, 2010 - The scent on Tuesday afternoon in the air along Wells Run stream was not that of wildflowers or mosses growing on rocks but that of gasoline.

It may be due to the roadwork along Adelphi Road, but some of it can be attributed to the oil that spilled into the creek over the weekend.

For most of Monday and Tuesday afternoon, a small crew from Marcor Environmental, a private company tasked to clean up the spill, could be seen in white uniforms placing oil-absorbent sheets into Wells Run.

More...

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Jury rules oil barge company must pay MA. residents

April 6, 2010- A Plymouth Superior Court jury agreed yesterday that an oil barge company that caused a large 2003 oil spill in Buzzards Bay must pay eight Mattapoisett property owners for damages to their properties.

The case is the first environmental class-action suit to go to trial in Massachusetts, according to the law firm of Stern, Shapiro, Weissberg & Garin, which is representing the homeowners. The New York barge company, Bouchard Transportation Co., did not immediately return calls for comment. It is unclear if it will appeal the decision.

More...

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Oil Tank Spill Contaminates Wyoming Neighborhood

March 11, 2009 - An above-ground tank outside a home in the Oakwood Village mobile home park tipped over during the night, dumping more than 100 gallons. The oil washed down the street, flowed under some homes and made its way into a nearby pond.

The state Department of Environmental Protection and EMA plan to do air quality testing periodically over the next few days to ensure there is no health hazard. The state Fish and Boat Commission was also called in to monitor the spill and potential affects on wildlife.

More...

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Keeping Up the Pressure On Brooklyn Oil Spill

February 3, 2009 - Newtown Creek, which separates Greenpoint, Brooklyn from Long Island City, Queens, is one of the most polluted bodies of water on the East Coast, the result of more than 150 years of heavy industry operating on its banks.

It is also the site of the 17-million-gallon underground Greenpoint Oil Spill, or “plume,” the result of several industrial accidents in the 1950s. Over the years, this plume has at times spilled into neighborhood basements, as well as into the creek itself.

More . . .

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Burst pipeline spills 80,000 gallons of heating oil in South Baltimore

February 20, 2008 - A burst pipeline spilled about 80,000 gallons of heating oil into the ground and sewers of Fairfield near Curtis Bay last fall, according to a state geologist.

The previously unreported oil spill came to light after Linda Stewart, proprietor of the Gaslight Tavern, started asking why local manholes were left uncovered.

Stewart says she is concerned about chemical contamination of the ground around her home and business and whether contaminated soils could cause her drinking water to become contaminated. "Both me and my husband have experienced burning eyes after getting out of the shower," she says.

More . . .

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Brooklyn Oil Spill Much Larger Than Originally Thought

September 13, 2007 - A new study of the nation's largest oil spill - at Newtown Creek on the Brooklyn-Queens border - found it's much larger that originally anticipated, is being cleaned up too slowly and raises serious questions about area residents' health risks.

The ExxonMobil spill, which happened in 1950 along the 31/2-mile creek, may be as large as 30 million gallons of oil instead of earlier estimates of 17 million, according to a report released yesterday by the federal Environmental Protection Agency.

More . . .