Lake Wateree, in South Carolina, which is part of the Catawba River system, is being poisoned by a coal ash pond located near the lake’s bank.
Streams of a poisonous, potentially cancer-causing substance recently were found draining to the Wateree River from SCE&G’s coal-fired power plant in lower Richland County.Consultants discovered elevated levels of arsenic seeping from an earthen wall along the power plant’s 80-acre coal ash waste pond, just a few miles upstream from Congaree National Park. The wall is supposed to block pollution from moving out of the pond and into the Wateree River, less than 300 feet away.
One of the consultants, J.C. Hare, said leaks he saw last month in the earthen wall created two streams of arsenic-tainted runoff that in places measured several feet wide.
Their reports, to be discussed this week as part of a court case against the power company, raise new questions about SCE&G’s ability to contain pollution on the property – and the state Department of Health and Environmental Control’s inability to stop the problem, critics say.
Some area residents fear pollution from the site could one day taint their drinking water, ruin the Wateree River and lower property values.
SCE&G officials declined interview requests by The State newspaper, but said in a statement they “look forward to elaborating further” on the test results in court.
The coal ash pond has leaked toward the river before. But Columbia lawyer and state Rep. James Smith is worried that it has happened again.
Arsenic seeping from the coal ash pond during the past 15 years has contaminated groundwater beneath the property at levels exceeding the federal safe drinking water standard, records show. Seepage also has been found between the pond and the Wateree River, a 2000 SCE&G report shows.
DHEC cited SCE&G in 2001 for violating groundwater standards for coal ash pond leaks, but did not fine the company. Instead, the power company struck a deal with DHEC, pledging to try to reduce the groundwater contamination.
Smith says the groundwater pollution is continuing – and so are surface-water leaks to the river. That should be a concern to everyone, he said.
What if drinking water makes you ill? Here’s what’s happening in Bangladesh:
This article appears in Oct 6-13, 2009.




Ok Frank, you think your soooo smart with nuke power, what are you going to do with all the
WASTE that nukes put off eh?
That stuff is thousands of times more deadly than any coal plant. You gonna put a wall up and let it seep thru too? Or throw it in the ocean to superpollute? No retard, the best thing to do is for YOU to shut up and place solar panels on all rooftops!
Or better yet, use Tesla’s free energy technology that no industry wants us to have, as they can’t make money off of it.
Unless you really WANT to change
things for the better, go live in a cave retard!
GRIFFIN, yet again, you’ve got the name of this post’s author wrong. But, let’s not worry about little things like facts, shall we?
And, moan all you want about nuclear energy — we still have to face the fact that we’ve got to clean up the mess we’ve already created. Bitching about what should have been isn’t going to make the coal ash ponds disappear, fool.