Wasting Our Waterways

Toxic Industrial Pollution and Restoring the Promise of the Clean Water Act

Chemical manufacturers, meat-processing plants, coal plants and other industrial facilities dumped more than 8.8 million pounds of toxic chemicals into North Carolina’s rivers and streams in 2012, the ninth most in the country, according to a new report by Environment North Carolina Research & Policy Center.

Environment North Carolina Research & Policy Center

Industrial facilities continue to dump millions of pounds of toxic chemicals into America’s rivers, streams, lakes and ocean waters each year – threatening both the environment and human health. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), toxic discharges from industrial facilities are responsible for polluting more than 17,000 miles of rivers and about 210,000 acres of lakes, ponds and estuaries nationwide.

To curb this massive release of toxic chemicals into our nation’s water, we must step up Clean Water Act protections for our waterways and require polluters to reduce their use of toxic chemicals.

Industrial facilities dumped 206 million pounds of toxic chemicals into American waterways in 2012, according to reports from those facilities to the national Toxics Release Inventory (TRI). (See Table ES-1.)

  • Our nation’s iconic waterways are still threatened by toxic pollution – with polluters discharging chemicals into the following watersheds: Great Lakes (8.39 million pounds), Chesapeake Bay (3.23 million pounds), Upper Mississippi River (16.9 million pounds), and Puget Sound (578,000 pounds), among other national treasures. (See Figure ES-2.)
  • Polluters released toxic chemicals to 850 local watersheds across the country. Indiana led the nation in total volume of toxic releases to waterways, with more than 17 million pounds of discharges from industrial facilities, followed by Texas and Louisiana. The top 10 states for toxic industrial releases to waterways were the same as in 2010. (See Table ES-2.)
  • Watersheds receiving the highest volumes of toxic pollution were the Lower Ohio River-Little Pigeon River (Indiana, Illinois and Kentucky), the Upper New River (Virginia) and the Middle Savannah River (Georgia and South Carolina). (See Table ES-3.)
Table ES-1. Industrial Toxic Releases by Watershed Region

Watershed Region
Total Pounds Released
Toxicity Weighted Pounds

Texas-Gulf

13,211,652

33,935,900

South Atlantic-Gulf

37,715,213

4,472,145

Lower Mississippi River

13,933,267

3,473,041

Pacific Northwest

6,472,813

1,292,540

Great Basin

1,275,484

1,070,625

Tennessee River

6,261,817

874,903

Arkansas-White-Red Rivers

13,005,273

611,570

Ohio River

43,103,836

496,583

Great Lakes

8,402,059

220,180

Souris-Red-Rainy Rivers

138,939

186,473

Upper Mississippi River

16,863,867

159,216

Mid Atlantic

23,690,915

131,270

Missouri River

14,878,771

105,362

Hawaii

435,662

40,131

New England

3,336,235

34,402

California

2,358,874

33,280

Upper Colorado River

22,143

2,038

Alaska

570,475

1,958

Lower Colorado River

3,632

1,906

Rio Grande River

35,857

333

Table ES-2. Top Ten States for Toxic Releases to Water in 2012

State

Toxic Releases (lbs.)

Indiana

17,761,310

Texas

16,476,093

Louisiana

12,618,616

Alabama

12,287,252

Virginia

11,821,961

Nebraska

10,506,483

Pennsylvania

10,470,231

Georgia

10,132,268

North Carolina

8,897,062

Ohio

7,567,720

 

 

 















Toxic chemicals linked to serious health effects were released in large amounts to America’s waterways in 2012.

  • Cancer: Industrial facilities released more than 1.4 million pounds of chemicals linked to cancer into 688 local watersheds during 2012, including arsenic, benzene and chromium. The North Fork Humboldt River watershed in Nevada received the largest release of carcinogens among local watersheds, followed by the Lake Maurepas watershed in Louisiana.
  • Developmental damage: More than 460,000 pounds of chemicals linked to developmental disorders were released into more than 600 local watersheds. Nevada’s North Fork Humboldt River watershed suffered the most developmental toxicant releases among local watersheds, followed by the Lake Maurepas watershed in Louisiana.
  • Fertility: Approximately 4.4 million pounds of fertility-reducing chemicals were released to more than 600 local watersheds. The Lower Chehalis River watershed in northwestern Washington, which flows into a bay surrounded by wildlife refuges, state parks and beaches, received the second-highest volume of reproductive-toxic releases in the nation.
  • Discharges of persistent bioaccumulative toxics (including dioxin and mercury) are also widespread.

Industrial facilities – especially those operated by corporate agribusiness – continue to release high volumes of nitrates into America’s waters.

  • Nitrate compounds – which can cause serious health problems in infants if found in drinking water and which contribute to oxygen-depleted “dead zones” in waterways – were by far the largest releases of toxic chemicals in terms of overall weight.
  • Corporate agribusiness facilities – such as slaughterhouses and poultry plants – were responsible for approximately one-third of all direct discharges of nitrates to waterways. This is in addition to huge volumes of runoff pollution from factory farms and other agribusiness operations.
  • Toxic releases continued in already damaged waterways. For example, Tankersley Creek in northeast Texas has long been the target of state and federal cleanup efforts, but a 30-year-old chicken-processing plant released four times more nitrates into Tankersley Creek in 2012 than it had in 2000.
Table ES-3. Top 10 Local Watersheds Receiving Toxic Releases, Total Pounds.

Local Watershed
Total Releases (lbs.)

Lower Ohio-Little Pigeon Rivers (IN, IL, KY)

14,727,205

Upper New River (NC, VA)

7,338,166

Middle Savannah River (GA, SC)

5,025,161

Muskingum River (OH)

4,414,602

Blackbird-Soldier Rivers (IA, NE)

4,372,706

Lower Platte-Shell Rivers (NE)

3,726,866

Buffalo River-San Jacinto (TX)

3,557,254

Brandywine Creek-Christina River (DE, PA)

3,416,615

Middle Ohio-Laughery River (IN, OH)

3,328,548

Lower Des Moines River (IA)

2,902,489

Toxic chemicals vary in the severity of the threat they post to the environment and human health. When weighted by toxicity of releases, the watersheds receiving the most toxic discharges were the Lower Brazos River (Texas), the Lower Grand River (Louisiana), and the North Fork Humboldt River (Nevada). (See Table ES-5.)

Table ES-4. Top 10 Local Watersheds Receiving Toxic Releases, Toxicity-Weighted Pounds Equivalent

Local Watershed
Toxicity Weighted Pounds Equivalent Released

Lower Brazos River (TX)

33,474,792

Lower Grand River (LA)

1,926,751

North Fork Humboldt River (NV)

1,042,622

Nooksack River (WA)

1,028,364

Noxubee River (AL, MS)

593,695

Lower Cape Fear River (NC)

550,152

Lower Sulphur River (AR, TX)

508,181

Lower Tennessee River (KY)

474,284

Bayou Sara-Thompson Creek (LA)

341,414

Middle Pearl-Silver Rivers (MS)

328,186

 

To protect the public and the environment from toxic releases, the United States should prevent pollution by requiring industries to reduce their use of toxic chemicals and restore and strengthen Clean Water Act protections for all of America’s waterways.

The United States should restore Clean Water Act protections to all of America’s waterways and strengthen enforcement and permitting under the Clean Water Act.

  • Specifically, the Obama administration should finalize its proposed rule clarifying that the Clean Water Act applies to headwater streams, intermittent waterways, isolated wetlands and other waterways.

State and federal policies should move industrial polluters away from the use of toxic chemicals, in favor of safer alternatives. Specifically, state and federal officials should:

  • Require the use of safer alternatives to toxic chemicals, where such alternatives already exist.
  • Phase out the worst toxic chemicals.

The data in this report do not cover the entire volume of toxic chemicals released to the environment – just the ones released to surface waterways by industrial facilities that report to the U.S. EPA’s Toxics Release Inventory.

  • Close loopholes that allow major polluters to avoid reporting their toxic releases. For example, the oil and gas industry should be required to report releases of fracking fluid and drilling waste to the Toxics Release Inventory.
  • The public’s right to know must include the storage of toxic chemicals, especially in light of the toxic spill that contaminated drinking water for 300,000 people in West Virginia in January 2014.

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