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E.P.A. Analysis Shows Decrease in 2009 Toxic Chemical Delivers in Massachusetts

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Category: Pesticides/Toxic Chemicals
Type: News
Source: EPA
Date: Thursday, December 16th, 2010

Analysis shows continued reduction of chemical disposal and delivers in New England

(Boston, Massachusetts - Dec. 16, 2010) - EPA's most recent Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) data is now accessible for the reporting year of 2009. TRI reporting provides Americans with vital information about their communities by publishing information on toxic chemical disposals and delivers into the air, land and water, as well as information on waste management and pollution prevention activities in neighborhoods across the country.

In Massachusetts, the reporting data show that overall delivers of pollutants to the environment have decreased since the previous reporting year (2008). TRI information is a key part of EPA's efforts to provide greater access to environmental information and get information to the public as quickly as possible. TRI was recently acknowledged by the Aspen Institute as one of the ten major ways that E.P.A. has strengthened America.

During 2009, the latest year for which data are available, approximately 21.9 million pounds of chemicals were released in the 6 New England states, a reduction of about 2,359,064 pounds. In Massachusetts, 454 facilities reported in 2009 approximately 3.2 million pounds (a decrease of 557,741 pounds). Approximately 60 percent of delivers in Massachusetts were emitted to the air during 2009. Across the U.S. in 2009, 3.37 billion pounds of toxic chemicals were released into the environment, a twelve percent decrease from 2008.

Each year, E.P.A. makes publicly accessible TRI data reported by industries throughout the U.S. regarding chemical delivers to air, water and land by power plants, manufacturers and other facilities which employ 10 or more workers and exceed thresholds for chemicals. This year, E.P.A. is offering additional information to make the TRI data more meaningful and accessible to all communities. The TRI analysis now highlights toxic disposals and delivers to large aquatic ecosystems, selected urban communities, and tribal lands. In addition, portions of the analysis are accessible in Spanish for the 1st time.

Reporting includes information on chemicals released at a company's facility, as well as those transported to disposal facilities off site. TRI data do not reflect the relative toxicity of the chemicals emitted or potential exposure to people living in a community with reported releases.

Facilities must report their chemical disposals and delivers by July one of each year. This year, E.P.A. made the 2009 preliminary TRI dataset accessible in July, the same month as the data were collected. This is the earliest release of TRI data to the public ever.

Reporting under TRI does not indicate illegal discharges of pollutants to the environment. E.P.A. works closely with states to provide regulatory oversight of facilities that generate pollution to the nation's air, land and water. Effective review and permitting programs work to ensure that the public and the environment are not subjected to unhealthful levels of pollution, even as agencies work to further reduce emissions of chemicals to the environment.

Further, robust enforcement efforts by E.P.A. and states ensure that facilities that violate their environmental permits are subject to penalties and corrective action. Yearly delivers by individual facilities can vary due to factors such as power outages, production variability, lulls in the business cycle, etc., that do not reflect a facility's pollution prevention program(s).

The top 10 chemicals released to the environment on- and off-site during 2009 in Massachusetts were:

- Hydrochloric Acid (after 1995 "acid aerosols" only), 1,498,575 lbs.

- Zinc Compounds, 485,361 lbs.

- Hydrogen Fluoride, 465,349 lbs.

- Nitric Acid, 379,071 lbs.

- Tuluene, 304,274 lbs.

- Ammonia, 291,456 lbs.

- Lead Compounds, 200,193 lbs.

- N-Butyl Alcohol, 182,196 lbs.

- Xylene (mixed isomers), 162,398 lbs.

- Certain Glycol Ethers, 151,141 lbs.

The 10 facilities that reported the biggest quantity of on- and off-site environmental delivers in Massachusetts under TRI for 2009 were:

Dominion Energy Brayton Point LLC., Somerset, 1,222,979 Lbs.

Evergreen Solar Inc., Devens, 732,243 Lbs.

IrvingOil Terminals Inc., Revere, 360,475 Lbs.

MountTom Generating Co. LLC., Holyoke, 302,334 Lbs.

Crown Beverage Packaging, Lawrence, 298,109 Lbs.

Callaway Golf Ball Operations Inc., Chicopee, 203,284 Lbs.

Dominion Energy Salem Harbors Station, Salem, 187,178 Lbs.

Solutia Inc., Springfield, 158,390 Lbs.

Clean Harbors of Braintree Inc., Braintree, 136,438 Lbs.

Acushnet Co. Ball Plant II, North Dartmouth, 119,580 Lbs.


TRI was established in 1986 by the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA) and later modified by the Pollution Prevention Act of 1990. Together, these laws require facilities in certain industries to report annually on releases, disposal and other waste management activities related to these chemicals. TRI data are submitted annually to E.P.A. and states by multiple industry sectors including manufacturing, metal mining, electric utilities, and commercial hazardous waste facilities.

E.P.A. continues to work closely with the regulated community to ensure that facilities understand and comply with their reporting requirements under TRI and other community right-to-know statutes. E.P.A. will once again hold training workshops throughout the New England region during the Spring of 2011. Training sessions will be set up in each state. Further information will be accessible on our Web site.

More information:

- TRI in Massachusetts Fact Sheet (epa.gov/triexplorer/statefactsheet.htm)

- Additional National information on TRI (epa.gov/tri/)

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