Daily Archives: August 14, 2012

Water contamination news: EPA takes action against Buffalo area gas stations to protect ground water from petroleum contamination.

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News Brief
Vol.III
249
Aug 14
2012

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EPA Takes Action against Buffalo Area Gas Stations to  Protect Ground Water from Petroleum Contamination
Water contamination news:

EPA takes action against Buffalo area gas stations to protect ground water from petroleum contamination.

Contact: John Martin, (212) 637-3662, martin.johnj@epa.gov.

(New York, N.Y. – August 14, 2012) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has issued a legal complaint to the owners and operators of twenty-two underground storage tanks at gasoline stations in the Buffalo, New York area for violating various federal regulations dealing with ground water from petroleum contamination. The complaint, which seeks $582,803 in penalties, was issued to Amerimart Development Company, Inc., Qual-Econ Lease Co., Inc., Commercial Realty Fund II, MJG Enterprises Inc., and Clear Alternative of Western NY, Inc. (d.b.a. G & G Petroleum). These companies are either past or present owners or operators of gas stations in Buffalo, Amherst, and Tonawanda, N.Y. In addition to paying penalties, the complaint requires the facilities to all come into full compliance with the regulations.

“Gas station owners need to be vigilant in making sure that their petroleum storage tanks do not cause pollution,” said EPA Regional Administrator Judith A. Enck. “When underground tanks are not properly maintained, ground water can be contaminated, putting people and the environment at risk.”

Ground water is the source of drinking water for nearly half of all Americans. When petroleum or other hazardous substances leak from underground tanks, such leaks are difficult and expensive to clean, particularly if they involve a public source of drinking water.

The complaint alleges that one or more of the companies failed to:

Test the protection systems for two tanks and two fuel lines

Meet corrosion protection or other new standards for two tanks and seven fuel lines

Conduct release detection every thirty days on eleven tanks:

Perform annual tests of automatic line leak detector systems for nineteen underground storage tanks

Provide adequate equipment to protect against tank overfills for thirteen underground storage tanks

Conduct an annual line tightness test or conduct monthly monitoring of underground pressurized piping for seventeen fuel lines

Properly cap off two temporarily closed underground storage tanks

Keep adequate records of release detection monitoring for three facilities

Respond to a request for information for one facility

The law authorizes EPA to seek between $11,000 and $16,000 per tank for each day a violation exists.

For more information on proper maintenance of Underground Storage Tanks, visit:

gas tank contamination

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    Drinking water crisis news: Africa – Ghana: water must be accessible to all.

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    News Brief
    Vol.III
    248
    Aug 14
    2012

     Save the water .


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    photo courtesy of East Africa Crisis AppealDrinking water crisis news:

    Africa – Ghana: water must be accessible to all.

    Allafrica.com / By Catherine Aubyn, 13 August 2012

    Water is indeed a necessity that sustains life and is universally used by all human beings. The lack of it poses a great risk to the survival of humans. The water crisis that has engulfed certain parts of Ghana, especially its capital, Accra, is rather unfortunate. Even Osu, the seat of government, is no exception.

    This should be a matter of concern to all Ghanaians. Ghana Water Company Limited (GWCL) is the state monopoly that provides water to every part of the country. When there is water shortage, the ordinary people who the GWCL serves do not care about the explanations being rendered to them by the company except to see water flow through the taps.

    A serious water crisis was recorded last six years in Cape Coast and that led to the shut-down of some schools. Sanitation there deteriorated and water-borne diseases like cholera proliferated. Last year, the same problem affected several hospitals in the country such as Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital, other Government Hospitals as well as private hospitals. The taps in some areas such as Osu Photo Club, OIC junction and Abebresem Street have not been flowing for the past ten months now. Residents walk long distances in search of potable water in the hours of dawn, carrying either buckets or gallons. This daily routine is tedious.

    Also, the people engaged in the water business, especially those who sell water from reservoirs, charge so much depending on the size of the container used. The same applies to the water porters who transport water on trucks. Money that could have been saved for the purchase of other important things is being spent on water.

    Researchers have also observed that increasing population, pollution and inefficient water management are major contributions to the crisis. About fifty per cent of Ghanaians have access to potable water and the rest obtain water from rivers, lakes, streams and wells which is unsafe for human consumption. For this reason, accessibility to water under the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) would have to increase to about seventy-five per cent in 2015.

    The Water Research Institute of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) has stated that Ghana will experience acute water shortage by 2020. Dr Edward Omane Boamah, then Deputy Minister for Environment, Science and Technology, stated at a workshop on “Managing Climate Change Risk” in November 2010, that “hydropower generation will decrease by sixty percent in the same period as all river basins will become vulnerable to water scarcity, adding that the quality of fresh water in rivers and other water bodies would also worsen because expected flood would carry power generation.”

    In view of this, what should be the contributions of Ghanaians in seeing to the abundance of potable water in all the parts of the country? Why is it that in the abundance of water bodies like the Volta River, some Ghanaians are still thirsty?

     Water crisis news: Africa: Port Elizabeth’s water crisis is nearly over.  /SABC/Sunday 5 August 2012 16:20 /Port Elizabeth’s water crisis is nearly over. One of the two major pipes supplying the city has been repaired and water is flowing slowly into the city’s resevoirs. The municipality says water should be available to all homes and businesses by lunchtime tomorrow. Thousands have been without water after the two pipes burst as a result of heavy rain falls on Thursday. Residents have had to fill buckets from tankers.

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    Water Shortage – 6 things to know – we’re facing a national crisis – Here’s how some communities are solving the problem. 08/15/2011.

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    News Brief
    Vol.III
    248
    Original post
    Aug 15
    2011
    Update
    Aug 14
    2012

     Save the water .


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    Posted: August 15
    2011
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    Cynthia Gordy Water Shortage: 6 Things to Know We're facing a national crisis. Here's how some communities are solving the problem.

    Water Shortage: 6 Things to Know

    We’re facing a national crisis. Here’s how some communities are solving the problem.

    • By: Cynthia Gordy | Posted: August 15, 2011 at 12:51 AM
    • Note: This article is one year old, however the problems are still present.

    Most Americans take drinking water for granted, turning on the tap and getting a fresh, clean supply. That’s not the case in every region, however, and dwindling resources make access to potable water an emerging, coast-to-coast problem. The Root spoke with organizations that are addressing the H2O shortage about why it’s happening, whom it most affects and what you can do.

    1. Most of the country is expected to face water shortages in the next few years.

    Celebrities from Jay-Z to Matt Damon have helped raise awareness about the global water shortage, which affects one in three people worldwide, but many don’t realize that the crisis includes the United States. “Water is becoming increasingly scarce around the globe as more and more is needed to sustain human development,” Emily Gordon, senior associate in the state and local initiatives department at Green for All, told The Root. “Part of that is because only 1 percent of the Earth’s freshwater is easily accessible to [humans]. We expect that 36 states will have water shortages by 2013.”

    Several states, particularly those in the Southwest, such as California, New Mexico and Texas, are already struggling with shortages. Making a bad situation worse, the South is experiencing unprecedented drought at “exceptional” levels. The combination of little rain and scorching heat drains reservoirs and increases water consumption, and there’s simply not enough to go around. Some counties import water from distant locales or rely on underground, nonrenewable supplies. In especially desperate cases, when supplies have been drained, water must be shut off for days, with residents relying on bottled water as tanks are refilled.

    “Even though most of us in this country see a lot of water,” said Gordon, who focuses on creating green job opportunities in the water sector, “we have to take into account that it’s a scarce resource.”

    2. It’s not a rural, “middle of nowhere” issue — cities have water troubles, too.

    Lack of access to water is often framed in terms of remote, rural communities that are cut off from municipal systems, but the shortage goes beyond questions of access. It’s also about water quality. Contaminated drinking water sickens an estimated 20 million Americans every year, especially in concrete-heavy urban locales.

    “When it rains in cities, the water hits rooftops and concrete instead of being absorbed back into the ground,” Gordon explained. “It runs off [of streets and sidewalks], picking up all sorts of bacteria, pollutants and chemicals along the way. That winds up in our water system, into streams, rivers and lakes that we use for swimming and drinking water.”

    Treatment plants clean that water, but because of outdated infrastructure, the process doesn’t always succeed. “Our cities have grown so much since our infrastructure was built,” Gordon said. “A city has way more concrete, pavement and other hard surfaces now than it did when its water system was built, and it can’t handle that amount of development. We’re left with this terrible stormwater runoff that can’t all be cleaned.” Another growing problem in drinking water are traces of pharmaceuticals, including antibiotics, hormones and mood stabilizers, which outdated treatment systems have not been designed to remove.

    3. Our water infrastructure has been neglected for decades.

    Most of the United States uses a post-World War II water system with leaky underground pipes. A 2009 report by the American Societyof Civil Engineers noted that some drinking-water systems are more than 100 years old and that the nation needs to spend $11 billion annually to replace treatment and distribution facilities. As the country struggles with budget concerns, however, federal investment in infrastructure continues to decline. “It hasn’t been prioritized as something that we need to invest in immediately, but I think as the situation becomes more dire, there will be more urgency around improving our water infrastructure,” Gordon said.

    The news isn’t all bad. An increasing number of cities — including Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, Milwaukee and Chicago — are upgrading their water systems with an eye toward green solutions. Philadelphia is investing $1.6 billion over the next 20 years into not only repairing pipes and traditional infrastructure, but also in such innovations as green roofs, absorptive pavement and expanded park spaces, which mimic natural processes and allow rainwater to infiltrate into the ground. Philly’s plan been hailed by environmental groups as the most comprehensive network of green infrastructure in any U.S. city.

    4. Communities of color are feeling the brunt of the problem.

    As with most other environmental issues, environmental injustice — using low-income communities and communities of color for garbage dumps, toxic-waste disposal and sewage facilities — also rears its head when it comes to water quality, as pollutants from such operations often seep into water supplies. Darryl Haddock, environmental education director for the West Atlanta Watershed Alliance, sees the problem in many of his city’s African-American neighborhoods.

    “Raw sewage is the second biggest pollutant, after sediment, that goes into most urban waters here,” he told The Root, explaining that because of a long-neglected and poorly designed water system, raw sewage flows into the city’s rivers and streams. “Communities of color are exposed to bacterial contamination in an inequitable fashion because we have more open creeks and streams on the west side of Atlanta. We’re also seeing a lot of illegal dumping of tires, construction debris and trash, so we have a litany of environmental stressors occurring.”

    Despite decades-old Environmental Protection Agency programs designed to regulate and monitor waste disposal so that it doesn’t harm people’s health and the environment, the problem persists. EPA administrator Lisa P. Jackson, the first African American to head the agency, took the helm in 2009 with a vow to elevate and address environmental justice issues.

    Recent EPA enforcement efforts have resulted in agreements by Cleveland and St. Louis to make extensive improvements to their sewer systems, which have long flooded waterways. Last spring the agency launched the Urban Waters Initiative, which combines the efforts of such federal agencies as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Department of Commerce to help local leaders clean their water sources.

    5. Bottled water isn't quite the solution you think it is.

    A recentstudy in the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine found that black and Latino parents are three times more likely to buy bottled water for their children than white parents. A leading factor is the belief that bottled water is cleaner and safer than tap. Environmental advocates understand concerns about tap water contamination, but they argue that relying on privatized sources of water, rather than addressing the structural issues of our public system, further risks water safety and supplies.

    “Bottled water costs 2,000 times more, although it’s less regulated than our tap water in many ways,” said Gordon, whose dubiousness about the cleanliness of some bottled water mirrors a National Resources Defense Council investigation, which found that 22 percent of bottled water was contaminated with chemicals, including arsenic. “As we see privatization becoming more and more of an issue, it’s even more critical that everyone can have access to clean, healthy drinking water. But it’s also got other environmental problems, like the plastic involved and all the water that goes into manufacturing water. It takes 1.8 gallons of water to produce a plastic bottle. So by drinking bottled water we’re wasting more water than we’re actually drinking.”

    6. You can make a difference.

    Your

    The concept of water conservation has been drilled into us for decades, but it hasn’t exactly caught on. Americans are the world’s biggest consumers, using an average 150 gallons a day. By comparison, in the U.K. people use only 40 gallons a day. Actually doing all those little tips and tricks you’ve heard — taking shorter showers, turning off the water after wetting your toothbrush in the morning — can go a long way in protecting a limited resource.

    “It’s one of those things where if everyone changed just one small habit, we could have a significant impact,” said Gordon.

    In his work with the West Atlanta Watershed Alliance, Haddock harnesses collective power to make a difference. In the late ’90s, the community group and partners successfully organized against a sewage plant that would have sent raw sewage from other parts of the city to a largely African-American neighborhood for treatment. Today the organization focuses on empowering Atlanta communities so that they understand where their water comes from and how to protect it — monitoring lakes and streams, attending civic meetings about zoning decisions and lobbying for green infrastructure.

    “Direct action and advocacy does work,” said Haddock. “People can affect the decision making that goes on in their neighborhoods. You don’t have to accept a blind referendum just because a policymaker decides that they’re going to change zoning in your community to benefit a polluter. Communities can have a real impact, but you have to be present at the table.”

    Cynthia Gordy is The Root‘s Washington reporter.

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    Water contamination news:

    Great Lakes – recovery starts on Lake Superior mystery barrels.
    Alberta, Canada – Enbridge shuts large Canada-US pipeline after spill.
    Pennsylvania, Allegheny County – Shenango Inc. settles air and water pollution violations with EPA.

    Drinking water news:

    80% of Hyderabad’s sewage dumped in lakes.
    Hope – India’s quality drinking water supply – “bio-toilets”
    Lake Huron – Impact of diesel spill on water, environment: ‘Time will tell’
    No plans for Carroll Creek warning signs. News comes after chemicals were found in surface water.

    Water education:

    Chemicals TCE – PCE – Chloroform
    How does TCE affect your health? – High level of cancer-causing agent TCE in Fort Detrick drinking water supply.
    Million year old groundwater in Maryland water supply.
    USA High level of cancer-causing agent found at Fort Detrick in Frederick.
    Tetrachloroethylene water contamination: Early life exposure to chemical in drinking water may affect vision.
    Warning on bleach use for emergency water.

    Fracking

    What is fracking? 5 Facts about fracking every family needs to know.
    Pennsylvania aquifers – Possible contamination of drinking water from fracking operations.
    Injection wells – Part 3 – An unseen link, then boom.
    Injection wells – Part 2 – Polluted water fuels a battle for answers.
    Injection wells – Part 1 – Whiff of phenol spells trouble.
    USA fracking–Research- Disputes a fundamental industry claim.

     Savethewater Water Research and Education water pollution  news brief

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    Global water news: Arabian Peninsula – Meeting water demand – Oman-utilities sector turning to private and foreign investors.

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    Save the water,current post

    News Brief
    Vol.III
    247
    Aug 14
    2012

     Save the water .


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    Global Arab Network – - Ahmed Gama
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    The utilities sector is turning to private and foreign investors to help spur the growth needed to meet local demand. The construction of 16 power and water projects worth $3.1bn is slated to increase water desalination capacity in the country, as well as improve wastewater treatment and conservation awareness, Global Arab Network reports according to OBG.Global water news:

    Meeting water demand – Oman – utilities sector turning to private and foreign investors.

    Global Arab Network – - Ahmed Gamal / Monday, 13 August 2012 18:10

    The utilities sector is turning to private and foreign investors to help spur the growth needed to meet local demand. The construction of 16 power and water projects worth $3.1bn is slated to increase water desalination capacity in the country, as well as improve wastewater treatment and conservation awareness, Global Arab Network reports according to OBG.

    According to the latest seven-year statement of the Oman Power and Water Procurement Company (OPWP), published in 2006, the total demand for desalinated water in the regions covered by the main interconnected system is increasing by approximately 12.5% per year, from around 86m cu metres per year in 2006 to a projected 197m cu metres in 2013. Peak daily demands are projected to reach 472,000 cu metres per day in the Muscat zone, 160,000 cu metres per day in the Sohar zone and 70,000 cu metres per day in the Sharqiya zone.

    The government has recognised the need to increase local desalination capacity to meet domestic water needs, and plans for a number of new projects and expansions are already in the works.

    For example, the race for a contract to build a $400m independent water desalination plant at Ghubrah, in the Muscat Governorate, has been narrowed down to five bidders. The first call for tenders for the project was put out in September 2011, with OPWP overseeing procurement on behalf of the Public Authority for Electricity and Water. The facility is expected to produce 191,000 cu metres of desalinated water per day.

    The five companies left in the running, having passed through the prequalification stage, are the Japan-based Marubeni Corporation; Singapore-based integrated water and environmental solutions provider Hyflux; Acciona Agua, a Spanish firm specialising in potable water and wastewater utility; Malakoff International, a subsidiary of the Malakoff Corporation, the largest independent water and power producer in Malaysia; and Spanish water utility firm Grupo Cobra. All five firms have submitted plans for the construction and development of the Ghubrah facility, and the winning bid is expected to be announced in the fourth quarter of 2012.

    In an additional boost to local water production, ACWA Power Barka, the first privately funded water project in the country, was given government approval in mid-July to increase its desalination capacity by 45,000 cu metres per day. Run by Saudi Arabia-based ACWA Power International, the facility was awarded permission to expand by the OPWP.

    The expansion will be a separate facility from the existing plant, but will also be located in Barka, some 65 km north of Muscat. Construction is due to begin by the end of the third quarter of 2012, and ACWA intends to begin water production by the fourth quarter of 2013.

    “In the medium to long term, this expansion project will prove to be a well-sought solution to balance shortfalls of current desalinated water production capacity,” said Mohammad Abunayyan, the chairman of ACWA Power International, when speaking with local media in July.

    This additional capacity has been made particularly necessary due to the likelihood that some of the older desalination units of existing plants – including at Ghubrah –will be taken out of operation in the coming years. The contract for ACWA’s Barka I plant will end in April 2018 if the agreement with the OPWP is not extended.

    An expansion in wastewater treatment will also provide an additional boost to the local supply. Haya Water, the government-run company that handles wastewater management for the Muscat Governorate, is aiming to help combat the annual 350m-cu-metre nationwide shortage by expanding its catchment and treatment facilities, which include areas that supply storage for rain and other water runoff.

    The company, which provides water to residential, commercial and government facilities in Muscat, is aiming to achieve an 80% network connectivity rate by 2018 – up from the current 22% – and to produce 220,000 cu metres of treated effluent, also known as recycled water, per day. While much of the treated effluent now goes toward watering the city’s parks and green spaces, much of the additional water will go toward cultivating local agriculture.

    “The current strategy for water treatment is to integrate the full cycle of water resources in a sustainable scheme, from production, treatment and distribution to reutilisation,” Hussain Hassan Ali Abdulhussain, the CEO of Haya Water, told OBG. “As two-thirds of all Oman’s agricultural products are imported, even if the water sector can add value of 10% to helping agriculture development through water and fertilisers, this will be a substantial contribution to local farms and reduce our national dependence on importing fruits and vegetables.”

    These new projects will all help to increase water treatment and desalination, and the expected tripling in the amount of treated wastewater will greatly increase the country’s ability to cultivate local agriculture, while additional desalination facilities will ensure that the supply of potable water continues to meet the needs of Omanis. (OBG)

  • How to navigate STW ™ postings:
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  • Subscribe: Subscribe to postings by entering your e-mail address and confirming your e-mail.

  • Help Save the Water™ – click here.


    Water news archives. Table of contents – 200 articles – April~August 2012

    Supporting water research and the education program’s growth of Save the Water™ is vital to our future generation’s health, your funding is needed.

    Rating for savethewater.org


    Water contamination news:

    Great Lakes – recovery starts on Lake Superior mystery barrels.
    Alberta, Canada – Enbridge shuts large Canada-US pipeline after spill.
    Pennsylvania, Allegheny County – Shenango Inc. settles air and water pollution violations with EPA.

    Drinking water news:

    80% of Hyderabad’s sewage dumped in lakes.
    Hope – India’s quality drinking water supply – “bio-toilets”
    Lake Huron – Impact of diesel spill on water, environment: ‘Time will tell’
    No plans for Carroll Creek warning signs. News comes after chemicals were found in surface water.

    Water education:

    Chemicals TCE – PCE – Chloroform
    How does TCE affect your health? – High level of cancer-causing agent TCE in Fort Detrick drinking water supply.
    Million year old groundwater in Maryland water supply.
    USA High level of cancer-causing agent found at Fort Detrick in Frederick.
    Tetrachloroethylene water contamination: Early life exposure to chemical in drinking water may affect vision.
    Warning on bleach use for emergency water.

    Fracking

    What is fracking? 5 Facts about fracking every family needs to know.
    Pennsylvania aquifers – Possible contamination of drinking water from fracking operations.
    Injection wells – Part 3 – An unseen link, then boom.
    Injection wells – Part 2 – Polluted water fuels a battle for answers.
    Injection wells – Part 1 – Whiff of phenol spells trouble.
    USA fracking–Research- Disputes a fundamental industry claim.

     Savethewater Water Research and Education water pollution  news brief

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