BP dumps mercury in lake http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-mercury_27jul27,1,141534.story?track=rss
Refinery has been exempt -- and new permit gives it 5 more years
By Michael Hawthorne | Tribune staff reporter
July 27,
2007
Although the federal government ordered states more than a decade
ago to dramatically limit mercury discharges into the Great Lakes, the BP
refinery in northwest Indiana will be allowed to continue pouring small amounts
of the toxic
metal into Lake Michigan for at least another five years.
A little-noticed
exemption in BP's
controversial new state water permit gives the oil company until 2012 to meet
strict federal limits on mercury discharges. In documents, Indiana regulators
predict the refinery won't be able to comply and will ask to continue polluting
after that date.
Federal records analyzed by the Tribune show BP puts 2 pounds of mercury into the lake every year from its
sprawling plant 3 miles southeast of Chicago in Whiting, Ind. That amount is
small compared with the mercury that falls into the water from air pollution,
but mercury builds up in the environment and is so toxic that even tiny drops
can threaten fish and people.
The BP refinery and a power plant in nearby Chesterton, Ind., are
the only two industrial polluters that still dump mercury directly into Lake
Michigan, federal records show. Under standards adopted by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency in 1995, BP's annual discharge of the metal should be reduced to 8/100th
of a pound.
BP already is drawing fierce opposition to its plans to dump
significantly more ammonia and suspended solids into Lake Michigan. Although
the amounts are still below federal water quality guidelines, BP's new permit
marks the first time in years that a company has been allowed to increase the
amount of pollution pumped into the lake, a magnet for sport fishing and the
source of drinking water for Chicago and scores of other communities.
"With one permit, this company and this state are undoing
years of work to keep pollution out of our Great Lakes," said U.S. Rep.
Rahm Emanuel (D-Ill.), co-sponsor of a resolution overwhelmingly approved by
the House this week that condemned BP's plans. "Nothing surprises me at
this point about what Indiana is allowing them to do."
Company officials and Indiana regulators contend the refinery's
wastewater poses no threat to people or aquatic life. They also say they did
everything they could to keep more pollution out of the lake.
In an e-mail response to questions, BP said Thursday that it
doubts any industrial polluter or municipal sewage treatment plant can meet the
stringent federal limit of 1.3 parts mercury per trillion parts water for
discharges into the Great Lakes. The company said some of its mercury discharge
likely comes from storm runoff and lake water drawn into the refinery.
"BP will work with [Indiana regulators] to minimize mercury
in its discharge, including implementation of source controls," the
company said in its response.
Other exemptions given
Peter Swenson, chief of the water permits section at the EPA's
regional office in Chicago, said some Great Lakes polluters have been granted
exemptions to the mercury limits when they renew their permits. But others have
been forced to comply immediately, he said, noting that emerging technology can
remove the metal from waste water.
A Tribune review of federal records shows that the waste water the
BP refinery pumps into Lake Michigan includes more than a dozen toxic
byproducts of oil refining, including benzene, toluene and suspended solids
containing mercury, lead, nickel and vanadium.
The refinery is the top industrial source of lead, nickel and
ammonia pollution directly released into the lake, according to the EPA's
Toxics Release Inventory. It also is one of only two industrial polluters on
the lake that dump acetonitrile, a chemical that metabolizes in the environment
to cyanide.
If BP were to meet the federal mercury standard for the Great
Lakes, it would take the refinery 25 years to put the same amount of the toxic
metal into Lake Michigan that it does now in one year.
BP sought a new water permit to accommodate an expansion project
that will enable the refinery to process more heavy Canadian crude oil, which
is considered a more dependable source than supplies in the Middle East.
When Indiana regulators last month allowed the company to increase
its pollution, they justified the move in part by noting the project will
create 80 new jobs.
The "waste-water permit for BP's Whiting refinery fully
complies with the federal Clean Water Act and assures the full protection of
Lake Michigan," Thomas Easterly, commissioner of the Indiana Department of
Environmental Management, said in a prepared statement. "The permitted
levels will not affect drinking water, recreation or aquatic life."
In documents filed with the permit, though, the agency noted that
levels of mercury and lead detected in the refinery's waste water "show a
reasonable potential" to violate water quality standards.
Mercury concerns environmental regulators because of its
staying power in the environment. The metal accumulates as it moves up the food chain from
bacteria to fish to people.
All of the states on the Great Lakes advise people to limit eating
certain types of fish because of high levels of mercury contamination.
Consuming even small amounts of mercury can damage the developing brain and
nervous system of infants and young children.
Prodded by Congress, the EPA moved during the 1990s to virtually
eliminate direct mercury discharges into the lakes. "The risks posed to
human health and to the Great Lakes themselves by these toxic pollutants are
simply too high to ignore," then-EPA Administrator Carol Browner said in
1999.
Air pollution remains the greatest source of manmade mercury in
the lakes. A
recent federal study estimated that 880 pounds of the metal drop into Lake
Michigan every year, mostly from the smokestacks of coal-fired power plants
along and near the shore.
Mercury discharged directly into the lake by BP's refinery is a
mere fraction of that amount. But a growing chorus of critics, including Mayor
Richard Daley, Gov. Rod Blagojevich and members of Congress, argue that BP's
new state permit sets a bad precedent that threatens to reverse more than three
decades of slow but steady progress cleaning up the lake.
"We determined a long time ago that Lake Michigan is a very
special resource that deserves added protection," said Dale Bryson,
president of the Alliance for the Great Lakes and former chief of the EPA's
regional water office. "This isn't harmless stuff. By now they should have
figured out what to do about it."