State announces 2004 emissions reports
Kathie Marchlewski, Midland Daily News 05/01/2006
Data includes an increase for Dow The Michigan Department of Environmental
Quality has released its annual report on toxic chemicals released or managed by
Michigan manufacturers, including The Dow Chemical Co. The 2004 data includes a
statewide decline of discharges, though in Midland, Dow has reported slight
increases, including in dioxin discharged into the Tittabawassee River.
Dow's discharges -- 564,000 pounds total, including trace amounts of dioxin
measured in grams -- account for only about half a percent of the 97 million
pounds of chemicals disposed of or released in the state in 2004 -- a seven
percent decrease over 2003. Dow's total was 537,000 pounds in 2003. The top
producer is Wayne County-based U.S. Steel Corp.; Dow ranks No. 28 of 900
facilities reporting.
Dow is the only facility in Michigan which reported surface water discharges of
dioxin and dioxin-like compounds, though it is not the only producer of the
toxins -- utilities and paper companies also typically produce the manufacturing
byproduct.
"If you measure, you have to report," said Paul Dean, of Dow Environmental
Health and Safety. Reporting dioxin surface water discharge is a requirement of
Dow's operating license.
The state has required facilities to report dioxin releases since 2000. That
year, Dow reported discharging 5.69 grams into the river. In 2001, it reported
2.565 grams; in 2002, 4.3 grams; in 2003, 0.894 grams, and in 2004, 1.57 grams.
While the amount of dioxin released appears to have increased over last year,
Dean said -- and DEQ officials agree -- that the number is an estimate, not an
absolute, and varies based on the amount of water being processed, rather than
actual detection and measurement of dioxins.
"We haven't really been seeing any detectable dioxins or furans in the
effluent," DEQ Geologist Allan Taylor said. "They have to report, and they have
to base that report on what could be there. That number is a very conservative
estimate of the most that could be there."
The measurement of dioxin and dioxin-like compounds reported by Dow also is a
total mass number -- that is, it does not account for variations in toxicity.
The amount of TCDD, the most toxic of the dioxins and dioxin-like compounds, is
calculated at about a half a percent of the mixture. Another 16 types of dioxins
are also included in emissions, each with lower levels of toxicity.
Taylor said the dioxin discharged into the Tittabawassee River today is
different in makeup from historical discharges that contaminated river sediment,
the flood plain, and stretched into the Saginaw River and Bay.
"It does look very different from the samples that we've taken," Taylor said.
Dow also reported 0.22 of a gram of dioxin discharged into the air.
Other dioxin releases shown in the TRI for Dow include 27,231 grams disposed of
-- a large jump from what other industrial facilities reported. "The next
closest is less than one gram," said Ruth Borgelt, DEQ TRI data analyst. She
attributes that increase to remediation activities. Even landfilled materials
must be reported, even though disposal is being conducted properly without
public impact.
The majority of the dioxin Dow reported comes from an ongoing project involving
the dredging of its tertiary ponds to remove sediment and move it to its
Salzburg Road landfill. The movement of that material had to be reported, even
though it was landfilled and disposed of properly.
Dean said that project is expected to be completed this year.
Overall, the company has reported strong improvements in the amount of chemical
emissions it has produced since 1994 -- 2004 marked a 42 percent reduction.
There has, however, been an increase in the number of release incidents it
reported to governmental agencies. In 2004, the most recent report available,
there were 29 incidents where Dow's chemical releases exceeded permitted limits
-- a 10-year high. In 2003, there were 22, and in 2002, 16 incidents.
Reducing that number to zero is the goal of the site's "Drive to Zero campaign
launched in 2005 with a "vision of zero -- zero injuries, zero incidents and
zero environmental harm."
"We will continue to build on the improvements we've made and address areas
where our performance still needs to be stronger," Dow spokeswoman Anne
Ainsworth said.
Globally since 1996, Dow's solid waste has been reduced by 1.6 billion pounds --
enough to fill 415 athletic fields one meter deep -- and waste water has been
reduced by 183 billion pounds -- equal to water usage for 170,000 U.S. homes for
one year. Since 1995, Dow has invested more than $400 million in a variety of
dioxin reduction projects, including improvements to treatment technology
projects. The result has been an 80 percent reduction of dioxin emissions to air
and water, and to air alone, a 95 percent reduction.
Dow's 2005 public report for Michigan Operations is expected to be available in
late May or early June.
Details about Michigan's Toxic Release Inventory data are available on the
Internet at www.michigan.gov/deqsara. Other information about the TRI is
available at www.epa.gov. Dow's public reports for Michigan Operations are
available at www.dow.com.
İMidland Daily News 2006
For additional articles like this one, go to the Tittabawassee River Watch web site www.trwnews.net for complete coverage of the Tittabawassee River Dow Chemical dioxin contamination saga. . The Newspaper / Media page of our site contains an extensive archive of media articles dating back to January 2002. The source organization's web site link is listed to the right of the article, visit often for other news in our area. The Newspaper / Media page may be accessed by scrolling down to the bottom of the CONTENTS section and clicking on the Newspaper/Media link.