Cement kilns release two times more mercury than EPA thinks: Report

Source The Daily Green

Cement plants release more than two-times as much toxic mercury as the EPA estimates, according to a study by two watchdog groups. The cement industry had escaped for 10 years many of the air pollution regulations that the EPA has enacted for power plants (though a recent court decision set back efforts to control mercury at power plants). In recent months, the EPA lost a court decision and so will have to set rules reducing mercury pollution from cement plants. Mercury is a potent toxic metal that attacks the brain, interrupting normal development, lowering IQ, causing learning disabilities and other developmental problems. People are most often exposed from eating contaminated fish, and fish are contaminated when smokestack pollution rains down and accumulates in the mud of lakes, reservoirs and rivers. Eight percent of American women of childbearing age have mercury in their blood at levels that threaten their children, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study. After the EPA started measuring mercury pollution from cement kilns, its estimate for total toxic contribution nearly doubled, from under 12,000 pounds per year to 23,000 pounds. The data was publicized in an Earthjustice and Environmental Integrity Project report. But the watchdogs stressed that the data was limited, and based only on the information the EPA requested and received from certain companies. Several big plants and at least one big company, Cemex, are not included in the tallies. The cement industry is heavily consolidated and controlled by international companies that are, in many cases, based outside of the United States. While the US economy demands cement, the pollution is dumped domestically while the profits are exported. The 150 cement plants in the US release mercury because they burn coal or other materials that contain mercury, and process limestone, which can contain mercury. Here's a list of the 28 cement kilns that emitted more than 100 pounds of mercury in 2006. (View all 100 in the EPA's Toxic Release Inventory. Where available, the actual or updated estimate for mercury pollution is noted. Otherwise, the numbers reflect the old data reported from cement kilns, not the new estimates by the watchdogs based on updated EPA data. Biggest Cement Kiln Mercury Polluters, 2006 Pounds Estimate / Actual–Facility, Location 1. 2,582 / 3,788–Ash Grove Cement Co., Durkee, Baker County, Ore. 2. 35 / 1,539–Lehigh Cement Co., Lehigh Bridge, Md. 3. 654–California Portland Cement Co., Colton, San Bernardino County, Calif. 4. 586–Lehigh Southwest Cement Co., Tehachapi, Kern County, Calif. 5. 522–Ash Grove Cement Co., Chanute, Neosho, Kan. 6. 496–Hanson Permanente Cement, Cupertino, Santa Clara County, Calif. 7. 472–Ash Grove Cement Co., Foreman, Little River County, Ark. 8. 417–LaFarge Midwest Inc., Alpena, Alpena County, Mich. 9. 416–LaFarge Building Materials Inc., Ravena, Albany County, N.Y. 10. 271–Cemex California Cement LLC, Victorville, San Bernardino County, Calif. 11. 252–River Cement Co., Festus, Jefferson County, Mo. 12. 241–Cemex Cement of Texas LP, New Braunfels, Comal County, Texas 13. 225–Cemex de Puerto Rico Inc., Ponce, Ponce County, Puerto Rico 14. 208–National Cement Co. of Alabama, Ragland, St. Clair County, Ala. 15. 190–Lehigh Cement Co., Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa 16. 176–Essroc Cement Corp., Speed, Clark County, Ind. 17. 172–RMC Pacific Materials, Davenport, Santa Cruz County, Calif. 18. 163–Essroc Cement Corp., Nazareth, Northampton County, Penn. 19. 161–Mitsubishi Cement Corp., Lucerne Valley, San Bernardino County, Calif. 20. 160–Buzzi Unicem USA, Cape Girardeau, Cape Girardeau County, Mo. 21. 159–Lehigh Cement Co., Mitchel, Lawrence County, Ind. 22. 153–Ash Grove Cement, Leamington, Leamington County, Utah 23. 151–Essroc Cement Corp., Bessemer, Lawrence County, Penn. 24. 149–Capitol Cement Corp., Martinsburg, Berkeley, W.Va. 25. 130–Buzzi Unicem USA, Greencastle, Putnam County, Ind. 26. 120–Holcim (US), Dundee, Monroe County, Mich. 27. 106–Holcim U.S. Inc., Clarksville, Pike County, Mo. 28. 105–Keystone Cement Co., Bath, Northampton, Penn.