July 5th, 2009 admin
Perry Twp.
Investigations are proceeding to find out what the cause of a February mercury spill at the United Parcel Service distribution hub which led to the facility closing down temporarily.
Alison Lamirand, of the Cleveland UPS regional office, said “We did have an incident involving mercury.” “We have a designated response system that was put in place. We are still working with a response team to make sure the facility is free of contaminants.”
Mercury is a heavy metal that is toxic and it is suspected that it entered the facility at 4850 Navarre Rd. SW in a delivery parcel, said Lamirand.
No One Harmed
Michael Settles, public-relations officer for the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency said “It is our understanding that, somewhere along the line, some package broke open, spilling 16 to 17 pounds of mercury. A pint-sized container of mercury weighs 14 pounds. Mercury is very heavy.” The EPA of Ohio responded with an official emergency response to the company.
Settles stated “It sounded like some of it may have spilled along an automated conveyor belt system. They are trying to make sure there isn’t mercury on other packages going through the system. To our knowledge, there has been no individual impacted to mercury exposure.” According to Mark Martin the Township fire chief, the local UPS officials did not immediately respond. “It appears they contacted a private contractor instead of calling us,” Martin said. “One of my fire inspectors will be going down there to talk to them.”
It seems that at least two vehicles from Sunpro Environmental were in the parking lot following the spill. Sunpro provides environmental and electronics services in the field, including clean up proceedures.
Not Common
Officials of the company have “to make sure everything is cleared with our response team,” Lamirand said. “They secured the area where this spill was affected; to make sure that no people came in contact with the area.”
Spills of mercury are far more common in homes and schools where older thermometers are most commonly found, according to the EPA. “This doesn’t happen a whole lot in a commercial operation or facility like this,” Settles said. “We don’t respond to a whole lot of mercury spills. It is usually residential.”
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July 5th, 2009 admin
The Obama administration called for an end to years of US policy by calling for a treaty to cut mercury pollution, which they described as the world’s leading chemical contaminant.
Each year, some 6,000 tons of mercury enter the food chain via predatory fish. The majority, about a third, of mercury comes from runoff from power stations and coal fires. Fish such as tuna are the most commonly affected species.
Mercury attacks young children and fetuses most and can cause birth defects and neurological disorders, brain damage and peeling skin.
The deputy assistant secretary of state for environmental and sustainable development, Daniel Reifsnyder, told environmental ministers in Nairobi Kenya that the US wants to limit mercury use beginning this year and ending in three.
“We’re prepared to help lead in developing a globally legally binding instrument,” he said. “It is clear mercury is the most important global chemical issue facing us today that calls for immediate action.”
This shows a complete “180 degree turn around” from the Bush administration said Michael Bender. Bender is the co-coordinator of the Zero Mercury Working Group, and global coalition of some 75 environmental groups dedicated to the elimination of the use of mercury.
“The change is like night and day. The Bush administration opposed any international legal agreements on mercury and President (Barack) Obama is in office less than one month and is already supporting a global agreement,” he said.
Bender’s group has had more discussions with the Obama administration over the past few weeks than the eight years during the Bush administration on mercury control. The US government has included many of their ideas in the proposal presented in Nairobi.
In addition, mercury is used in small scale mining operations and chemical production; the toxin can travel thousands of miles via air or water.
The Food and Drug Administration in America has told expectant mothers to limit their consumption of Albacore tuna to six ounces a week or twelve ounces of “light” tuna a week. The health effects of the tuna and its effects are still being scientifically debated. In California, authorities have been locked in a five year legal battle to make tuna companies place warning labels on their products about the health risks involved with consumption of fish with potentially harmful levels of mercury.
In spite of all the warnings, there is very little public awareness of the dangers of mercury in seafood. In the state of Idaho , a food bank distributed approximately ninety-six ounces of fish in food baskets given to families. This is forty-eight times more than a child that weighs under thirty pounds is advised to eat monthly, according to the Health and Welfare advisory.
Furthermore, there is even less awareness in developing countries where small mining operations use mercury to pan for gold and where fishermen eat contaminated fish or provide it to high end sushi restaurants.
When probed about mercury levels in a sushi feast by an Associated Press reporter, Peter Omoga, manager at a Japanese restaurant in the Kenyan capital, he asked “Murky? Maki?”
Substitutes for mercury exist in almost every industry except coal fueled power plants, which accounts for more than fifty percent of the mercury emissions around the world. This complicates efforts especially in countries that rely heavily on coal for their power needs.
To help reduce the use of mercury, clean up contaminated areas and find environmentally friendly alternatives, the US drafted a proposal that would form a committee in conjunction with the UN environmental program to help countries in these efforts. The European Union has already banned the exportation of mercury beginning in 2011; the US has a similar ban starting in 2013 which was implemented by President Obama while he was a Senator.
Bender has said that mercury levels around the world have increased two to three times over the past two hundred years. Advocacy groups that have worked on influencing policy change have welcomed the new US policies which they say could help encourage other countries, such as Canada, to also change their national policies on mercury use and elimination.
“Given that the United States has pushed the door of resistance in a sense, that will lead others to follow,” said Susan Egan Keane of the Washington, D.C.-based Natural Resources Defense Council.
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