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"THE ONLY THING NECESSARY FOR THE TRIUMPH OF EVIL IS FOR GOOD MEN TO DO NOTHING"
--Burke

Monday, August 8, 2022

Hexavalent chromium used as rust suppression for electric generating plants and gas compressor stations

 From Wikipedia 7-2022

"In 1993, legal clerk Erin Brockovich began an investigation into the health impacts of the contamination. A class-action lawsuit about the contamination was settled in 1996 for $333 million. In 2008, PG&E settled the last of the cases involved with the Hinkley claims. Since then, the town's population has dwindled to the point that in 2016 The New York Times described Hinkley as having slowly become a ghost town.[4][5]"

Compare with asarco El paso timeline.  

This chemical has long list of effects.

The contamination issue went back decades before chemical recognized as harmful.


Saturday, July 10, 2021

Khian Sea 1986 & Basel convention

 The International Trade In Toxic Waste: A Selected Bibliography Of Sources 

Deanna L. Lewis <lewis@winthrop.edu> and Ron Chepesiuk <chepesukr@winthrop.edu> 

Dacus Library, Winthrop University, Rock Hill, SC 29733, USA. TEL: 803-323-2131. 

Call it a toxic memorial, a monument to loose laws and fast money. This monument, tons of municipal 

incinerator ash from Philadelphia, lies on a rural Haitian beach where it was dumped one night in 1986 by a 

barge called the Khian Sea. 

The ship had entered the port with a permit to unload fertilizer. Fertilizer? Hardly! This cargo contained 

some of the most toxic chemicals on the planet--dioxins and furan and laced with heavy metals such as lead, 

cadmium, mercury and arsenic. As workers began heaping the ash only yards from the incoming waves, one

crewman even stuffed his mouth with a handful of the flaky black cargo to prove its harmless nature. Nearly 

one fourth of the 13,000 plus tons of waste had been unloaded from the barge before the Haitian 

government intervened and ordered the ash reloaded onto the barge. But the Khian Sea disappeared under

the cover of darkness, leaving approximately 3,000 tons of toxic ash on Haiti's beach. 

The Khian Sea returned to Philadelphia with the remainder of its deadly cargo. The ship spent the next two 

years vainly seeking a dumping ground; it crossed the Atlantic, sailed around the coast of West Africa, 

through the Mediterranean, down the Suez Canal and into the Indian Ocean. When it finally pulled into the 

Singapore harbor it had a new name (the Pelicano), a new owner, and an empty hull. 

No one is willing to take responsibility for this scandal. The city of Philadelphia blames the middleman who 

blames the barge owner. The owner claims the ash was still on board when the barge was sold. The tangled 

case went to court; finally in 1993, two executives of Coastal Carriers, operators of the Khian Sea, received 

modest fines and prison sentences for dumping in the ocean without a permit. The legal battle is not over 

yet. But how much longer will the ash sit on the beach, and who will remove it? 

While the Khian Sea incident is one of the most notorious episodes of the international toxic waste trade, it 

is by no means an isolated incident. In Koko, Nigeria, 3,800 tons of highly poisonous waste, including

potentially lethal polychlorinated byphenyls (PCBs), were found in drums at an open site; they were dumped 

by a local businessman who forged his cargo papers and bribed Koko port officials. An American chemical 

company sold 3,000 tons of fertilizer to the Bangladesh government, but 1,000 tons of ash from copper 

smelting furnaces was mixed into the fertilizer before it was shipped. U.S. officials verified that this altered 

fertilizer contained dangerous levels of lead and cadmium. In another case, several hundred mysterious

barrels washed up onto the Turkish shore. When curious locals opened some of the barrels, they suffered 

from nausea and skin rashes. A few barrels even exploded. In fact, countless barrels of trouble have rolled 

down the economic slope to a number of poor, less developed countries: black South Africa, the former East 

Germany, China, Romania, Poland, Thailand, the Ukraine, and others. 

The lure of foreign currency available in the international waste trade can be awfully tempting to cash-poor 

developing countries. In Papua New Guinea, for example, the government of the province of Oro negotiated 

a deal with a California firm to build a $38 million detoxification plant to process 600,000 metric tons of toxic 

waste a month. The deal, had it gone through, would have generated an income approximately six times the 

annual provincial budget.

Unfortunately, the importing countries, enticed by the prospects of multimillion dollar boosts to their 

economies, often make these deals with little understanding of the health and environmental dangers 

involved. Most developing countries have neither the technical expertise nor adequate facilities for safely 

recycling or disposing of wastes. 

Greenpeace observers have documented dozens of Third World recycling facilities which would not meet 

safety or environmental standards in the industrialized world. The substandard, even primitive, facilities 

contribute to the improper handling of hazardous wastes in these countries. In addition, many employees at 

these facilities lack adequate protective equipment. As a result, recycling-industry workers develop a variety 

of health problems. Laborers who melt down car batteries develop lead poisoning. Employees are exposed to 

cancer-causing dioxins and other toxic chemicals which are created when electronics industry wastes are 

burned. Workers are not protected from the toxic fumes created by the open burning of polyvinyl chlorides 

(PVCs). Other problems include mercury poisoning, increased rates of birth defects and miscarriages, kidney 

disease, cancer, and even death. 

But the risks do not stop there. The air, water, and soil pollution that results from improper recycling 

ventures endanger the whole community. Equally as bad, much of the hazardous wastes which are exported

to Third World countries ends up in their landfills where it creates the same ecological problems created by 

landfills in industrialized countries. 

Eager to avoid negative publicity as well as to circumvent laws against the dumping of toxic wastes, many 

companies disguise their deadly exports with benign labels. Greenpeace estimates that 86% to 90% of all 

hazardous waste shipments destined for developing countries are purported to be materials for recycling, 

reuse, recovery, or humanitarian uses. These creative schemes have included selling waste materials as a 

source of fuel, shipping contaminated soil to be used as fill dirt for road construction, billing plastic wastes 

as raw materials for the construction industry, passing off aluminum waste as feed for livestock, and tagging 

waste from a metals processing plant as micronutrients for soil enhancement (i.e. fertilizer). 

The importing countries are discovering that toxic wastes by another name still don't smell any sweeter. 

Indonesia was importing foreign plastics for recycling, but in 1992, after discovering that 40% of the

imported material was not recyclable and that approximately 10% of it was actually toxic, the government 

banned any further importation of plastic waste. 

It is ironic that stricter environmental protection in the West is contributing to the build up of dangerous 

wastes in the Third World. The export of hazardous wastes from the highly industrialized Organization for 

Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries to lesser developed non-OECD nations has grown 

dramatically in the last twenty-five years. Greenpeace estimates that in the twenty years before 1989 

approximately 3.6 million tons of hazardous wastes were exported, but as much as 6662.6 million tons were 

shipped in only five years between 1989 and 1993. 

Some measures have been taken to stem this toxic tide. By 1993, 105 countries had banned toxic waste 

imports. A number of regional agreements have been adopted or are under consideration. CARICOM, an 

association of 13 Caribbean nations, and the Economic Community of Western African States (ECWAS) have

each approved regional bans on the importation of hazardous wastes. In 1991, the Organization of African 

Unity (OAU) adopted one of the world's strongest statements against the toxic waste trade, the Bamako Convention on the Ban of the Import Into Africa and the Control ... of Hazardous Wastes Within Africa. In 

the Mediterranean area, the terms of the Barcelona Convention, which would also ban hazardous waste 

imports, is being completed. The Asian Waste Trade Coalition, an informal association of more than one

hundred Asian environmental and humanitarian organizations, is being formed to arrest the flow of 

hazardous wastes into Asia. 

The most significant international agreement, however, is the Basel Convention on the Control of the 

Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Waste and Their Disposal. This treaty, referred to as the Basel 

Convention or the Basel Pact, provided the world with the first clear set of principles for controlling the 

international trade in toxic waste. The UN sponsored this treaty which was adopted by 35 countries in 1989; 

by March 1994, 65 nations had ratified the pact. (The U.S. has signed but not ratified the treaty; therefore, 

it may send a nonvoting representative to each full Conference of the Parties of the Basel Convention.) 

Critics of the Basel Convention blasted its weak stance against the toxic waste trade. The Convention asked, 

rather than required, industrialized nations to cease shipping hazardous wastes to less developed countries. 

In addition, wastes which were exported for recycling were excluded from even this modest request. No 

wonder so many recycling schemes were devised by Western companies. Finally in March 1994, the second 

Conference of the Parties of the Basel Convention adopted a full ban on all hazardous waste trade to 

developing countries--a move applauded by Greenpeace and other environmental groups. This ban doesn't 

take effect until December 31, 1997, however. 

It is little wonder that the Third World has leveled charges of "toxic terrorism" and "garbage imperialism" 

against the highly industrialized world. As one African official phrased it, the Third World fears that it is 

being changed from "the industrialized world's backyard to its outhouse." 

This selected bibliography has been compiled to aid researchers interested in studying this important 

environmental problem. The bibliography covers the period from 1980 to 1993 and includes monographs, 

journal articles, videos, dissertations, and United Nations and U.S. Government documents. It is arranged 

by type of document, and within types, it is generally arranged alphabetically by the documents' author. 

MONOGRAPHS 

Costner, Pat. 1989. Waste Traders Target the Marshall Islands: A Greenpeace Report on Admiralty Pacific's 

Proposal to Dispose of US Municipal Garbage in the Marshall Islands. Washington, D.C.: Greenpeace. 

Danaher, Kevin. 1989. Toxic waste dumping in the third world. In Un-greening the Third World: Food, 

Ecology and Power. London: Institute of Race Relations. 

Greenpeace. [n.d.] Open Borders, Broken Promises: Privatization and Foreign Investment: Protecting the

Environment Through Contractual Clauses. London: Greenpeace UK. 

[n.d.] Pacific Waste Invasion! The Many Schemes of Consolidated Environmental, Inc. Washington, D.C. 

Greenpeace. 

[n.d.] The Proposed Likiep RRS: Resource Recovery on Toxic Dumping. San Francisco, CA: Greenpeace.

....etc






Sunday, July 4, 2021

DZERZHINSK to corpus christi 2016

 See more goods shipped on Panjiva

Sample Bill of Lading

5 SHIPMENT RECORDS AVAILABLE

Date
2016-11-23
Shipper Name
First Plant Llc
Shipper Address
DZERZHINSK DISTRICT KALUGA REGION VILLAGE POLOTNYANIY ZAVOD 249845 RU
Consignee Name
Litasco Sa
Consignee Address
9 RUE DU CONSEIL GENERAL 1205 GENEVA SWITZERLAND
Notify Party Name
Valero Marketing And Supply Co
Notify Party Address
ONE VALERO WAY, SAN ANTONIO,TX 78249
Weight
1246
Weight Unit
ET
Weight in KG
1246000.0
Quantity
1
Quantity Unit
LBK
Shipment Origin
Russia
Details
1,246,000.0 kg
From port: Leningrad, Russia
To port: Corpus Christi, Corpus Christi, Texas
Place of Receipt
St. Petersburg
Foreign Port of Lading
Leningrad, Russia
U.S. Port of Unlading
Corpus Christi, Corpus Christi, Texas
U.S. Destination Port
Corpus Christi, Corpus Christi, Texas
Commodity
8, 292 BBLS FUEL OIL
Container
NC
Carrier Name
MINERVA MARINE INC
Vessel Name
MINERVA ZOE
Voyage Number
161
Bill of Lading Number
MIMA4482
Lloyd's Code
9255684
HTS Codes
HTS 1516.20

Saturday, July 3, 2021

Blue alligator

 In mid 2000's a corpus Christi resident who lived near ENCYCLE told me a bright blue alligator was seen in water near/at plant.  

Encycle was right on a channel for 7th largest port in the USA.  They took in stuff to be recycled but railed a lot of unknown materials to worlds largest two contop furnaces in el paso tx to be illegally burned.  The smelter burned this type stuff from at least 1992 thru 1998.  Maybe longer.

Blue animals

 

Blue Dogs Found Roaming Near Abandoned Chemical Plant

Photographs of a stray pack of bright blue dogs on a snowy road in Russia have been circulating online.

The pictures were taken in the city of Dzerzhinsk, 230 miles east of Moscow and posted to the Russian social media site vk.com, according to The Moscow Times.

Dzerzhinsk 1996 toxic waste

 

Living on Earth

Air Date: Week of August 1, 1997

Dzerzhinsk (der- JZINSK), a once-secret city 300 miles east of Moscow once housed the Soviet Union's chemical industry. Today, it manufactures consumer goods -- including soaps, car parts and plastics in factories that are still dumping massive amounts of pollution into the air, land and water. Beth Knobel reports.

Transcript

CURWOOD: Most Russians have probably never heard of Dzerzhinsk, a once-secret city 300 miles east of Moscow, that housed the Soviet Union's chemical industry. During the Soviet days, Dzerzhinsk produced chemical weapons. Today, it manufactures consumer goods, including soaps, car parts, and plastics. Seventy percent of the city's 300,000 residents still work in the chemical plants, and those factories are still dumping massive amounts of pollution into the air, land, and water. Outside scientists are getting into Dzerzhinsk for the first time. They say that decades of chemical production have left the city coated with toxic wastes. Beth Knobel has our report.

(High-speed machinery whining)

KNOBEL: Block Number 42 in the massive Orgsteklo plastics factory looks like it hasn't been painted in decades. Inside the rundown warehouse, little plastic beads are formed into sheets of plexiglass, which are cut and then sold around Russia. In the process, the factory creates a putrid, burning smell, spewing toxins into the atmosphere, blanketing the whole town with pollution. Plant managers of the 60-year-old factory know they're destroying the air and water in Dzerzhinsk, but their main concern is keeping the factory's 6,000 workers on the job. Konstantin Varov is the company's general director.

VAROV: (Speaks in Russian) TRANSLATOR: What can I say? The biggest problem is the age of our equipment. Economic times are so tough, we can't buy much modern equipment. That's the root of our problem.

KNOBEL: The Orgsteklo plastics plant illustrates the paradox of Dzerzhinsk. Industry keeps the city alive, but it's also slowly, quietly poisoning its inhabitants. Unregulated dumping of chemicals and waste water has littered the ground with toxic pollution, which has leaked into the ground water, and seeped into the crops. Researcher Alexei Kislov of the Russian office of Greenpeace estimates that the pollution, especially dioxins, is cutting the average lifespan of people in Dzerzhinsk by 15 years.

KISLOV: We've never seen in Russia such polluted soil, water, and air like in Dzerzhinsk.

(Walking on clinkers)

KNOBEL: Outside the plastics plant, my nostrils start to burn as I approach a chemical pond hidden in some reeds. The size of 2 city blocks, the pond's water is an eerie shade of orange, with thick slicks of oily black chemicals on top. The mix is so dense, that rocks I throw in--

(Fplop!)

KNOBEL:--linger on the surface before sliding into the murky ooze. Dozens of rusted metals barrels sit in and around the chemical lake. They're partially decomposed, and one disintegrates when I touch it lightly with my boot.

(Rattle of rust crumbling)

KNOBEL: What is, or was in them, nobody knows.

(Rumble of wind)

KNOBEL: A few miles away, I find another lake. The locals call it the "White Sea." Dust blown up by the strong winds quickly coats me as I approach it. About 100 acres in size, it's ringed with icebergs of dry chlorine. Most of the water is gone, leaving a 3-foot thick blanket of chemical waste. While the toxic layer looks hard as cement, it's soft to the touch, and blows off in a strong breeze. From sites like these, dioxins and other toxic chemicals contaminate the air, water, and local food supply. Over the decades, 3 generations of Dzerzhinsk residents have been exposed to the pollution, and doctors say the effects are starting to show.

(Infant cries amid concerned adult voices beyond)

KNOBEL: At Dzerzhinsk's second maternity hospital, about 2 dozen infants, swaddled tight in blankets, cry themselves to sleep. The staff here has noticed a increasing amount of what they say are dioxin-related problems in the city's children. They say the rate of birth defects here is 3 times the already high national average in Russia. Many are born with weak immune systems. The hospital's head doctor, Grachya Muradyan, has been delivering babies here for 30 years.

MURADYAN: (Speaks in Russian) TRANSLATOR: What we see here among women is gross hormonal imbalance, uterus disruption, problems in childbirth, and the outward signs of this include hair growth on the stomach and the breasts. It's showing up in the second or third generation of women born in Dzerzhinsk.

KNOBEL: Residents of the city know about the pollution-related health problems, but for most of them, like this pregnant woman, there's no emotional or economic incentive to leave.

WOMAN: (Speaks in Russian) TRANSLATOR: Our city it is horrible. The ecological situation is very bad, but I don't want to leave this city. It's my home.

KNOBEL: Nearby, a man carrying his infant son says he'd leave Dzerzhinsk if he could. But, trained to work in a plastics factory, he has nowhere else to go.

MAN: (Speaks in Russian) TRANSLATOR: We have an ocean of problems, and they're getting worse. I hope my little son won't grow up in Dzerzhinsk. It's my dream that he'll move somewhere else.

KNOBEL: City officials try to play down the pollution problem, repeating, like a mantra, that the problems of Dzerzhinsk parallel those of other cities with heavy industry in America and Europe. But when pressed, officials like Mayor Aleksander Romanov admit the dioxin problem is serious. Still, he says, unemployment is rising, and in the short term, his constituents must work, regardless of the environmental cost.

ROMANOV: (speaks in Russian) TRANSLATOR: The fact of the matter is that ecology and economics are different sides of the same coin. The problem of ecology can't be solved without addressing the economy, and vice versa. So these two problems must be addressed in tandem. A plan has already be worked out, so we here look at the future with optimism, and I'm sure we'll find a way to conquer both problems.

KNOBEL: There is one long-term solution. Mayor Romanov and his team have drafted plans to try to attract foreign investors to the area, with their new, cleaner methods of production. Part of the plan calls for federal tax breaks for clean businesses that move into Dzerzhinsk. To get those tax breaks, officials are trying to get the Dzerzhinsk declared an environmental disaster zone. But Dzerzhinsk has yet to submit its application for disaster status to the federal government. The city worker preparing it has been out ill for 2 months. For Living on Earth, I'm Beth Knobel in Dzerzhinsk, Russia.

 

Saturday, March 20, 2021

FOIA # to request the 6 EPA disks


 

Medal 1995 registered at LIMIT of residentially allowed radioactive radiation 2 mS



 

Credit Suisse 1 of 2 lead managers


 

includes accounts at the former institution Schweizerische Kreditanstalt, which later became Credit Suisse


List of 12,000 Nazis, Swiss bank accounts found in Argentina

By Don Jacobson

"March 5, 2020 at 2:33 PM

Investigators said the list includes accounts at the World War II-era institution Schweizerische Kreditanstalt, which later became Credit Suisse. File Photo by Ennio Leanza/EPA-EFE

March 5 (UPI) -- A list has been discovered in Argentina that includes names of thousands of former Nazis and their Swiss banking accounts that may have held stolen profits from German appropriations during World War II.

The records were found in a Buenos Aires building that was formerly a Nazi headquarters, officials said.

The U.S.-based Simon Wiesenthal Center, which has for years tracked down members of Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party, said it has received the list -- which contains 12,000 names, and some are believed to have deposited ill-gotten monies into what's now Credit Suisse bank.

The Wiesenthal Center said Monday it asked for and was given the list by Argentine investigator Pedro Filipuzzi, who discovered the papers at the building in Buenos Aires.

The find is considered significant, as the pro-Nazi Argentine government that took power during World War II destroyed evidence of the party's activities that had been compiled in the 1930s by the anti-Fascist government of Argentina President Roberto Ortiz. The bank papers were part of the evidence collected by Ortiz before his administration was overthrown in 1943.

At that time, at least 1,400 members of the German National Socialist Party were living in Argentina, along with thousands of supporters and members of front organizations.

Investigators said the list includes accounts at the former institution Schweizerische Kreditanstalt, which later became Credit Suisse. The Wiesenthal Center said it suspects at least some of the money in the accounts was looted from Jewish victims in Germany and is still held in dormant accounts.

The Wiesenthal Center said it contacted Credit Suisse Vice President Christian Kung about accessing bank archives "to settle this matter on behalf of the diminishing number of Holocaust survivors."

Bank officials pointed to an investigation in the late 1990s that concluded it and other Swiss banks compiled "as complete and exhaustive a picture as possible" of the accounts of the victims of Nazi persecution, but said it would examine them again."

https://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2020/03/05/List-of-12000-Nazis-Swiss-bank-accounts-found-in-Argentina/4191583431003/



Comment to "copper stain" book interview

https://www.krwg.org/post/fronteras-911-copper-stain-asarcos-legacy-el-paso-elaine-hampton

Comment: by mcmurray

"Google "asarco secret document

The authors were kind and gave me a copy of the book, and mentioned me as getting a document from US EPA.

Actually, after tedious unpaid months of work in 2006, the TX OAG contacted the US DOJ who then speedily got me a copy of the secret 73 page EPA ASARCO US DOJ 1998 "confidential for settlement purposes only" document. TO THIS DAY the government has not released the invoices listed in it to me, the local cleanup trustee or anyone

I fought years later to get all the USEPA documents that had remained hidden in CO. The US EPA REGIONAL DIRECTOR gave the over 20 boxes of documents to me after 2008. (Anyone can file a foia request for copy of those searchable disks!!!!). Hidden in the middle of a 500 page file of many documents was the ****1994 encycle whistleblower report.*** We had never seen it before. You can search for the link to it in my blog -as a reporter was kind enought to write about it.

It is great to see good information and stories documented in this book "copper stain"; but, frustrating that neither author had training in science research so some of the facts got lost, or changed by no fault of theirs

Only one worker spoke up in 2005 at the air permit hearing. One. The workers now regret it as they see how Asarco abandoned them: many to slow agonizing unusual deaths normally associated with toxic waste exposure.

As a former asarco supervisor of the steam electric plant said, he regretted it all when he watched children play in the dirt. All his staff was dead. He had illness. The water that ran thru that plant had been run hard thru a water distillation purification unit that failed to keep up. So when that water steamed it caused some toxins to turn into vapor. The supervisor said not to touch the pond that held that water--- or any of the ponds.

Later that uit caught on fire. Afterwards neithe EPA, tceq, the cleanup trustee--- no one would allow me to bend down 3 ft and double bag an official sample of that tiny scintillating piece of slag from the fire. That piece of slag contained the necessary link to economically protect our region from what happened/protect the workers. NO ONE BACKED ME UP. And more interesting, none of the government or clean up guys wanted to walk on that dirt--- they stayed way back on the pavement

I feel for the parents of the children born at county hospital with major organs missing, who had livd along the river in the 1990's downwind and downriver from the contop furnaces altered to run more stuff thru by asarco.

Parents mourn deaths of their babies from causes like that, forever and might blame themselves trying to wonder if baby would have survived had they done something differently.

I hope that any parent who experienced that back then will not punish themselves because such birth defects can be stringly associated with industrial chemical exposures."


God bless those babies in heaven, the nursing staff who remembered them and the families who lost the babies to lack of a brain, a liver, a spleen or worse, dying an agonizing slow death.


It has been 20 years. On this coming mothers day if just one mother realized she could not have done differently/not her fault, that would be a blessing.

Friday, December 11, 2020

Toxic slag to be milled & sent to s. Korea

 

EDITOR'S PICK TOPICAL ALERT TOP STORY

Part of East Helena slag pile bound for South Korea

Nearly 2 million tons from East Helena's 14 million-ton slag pile will be moved by rail to Washington, then shipped to South Korea as part of an effort to clean up the Superfund site at the former ASARCO East Helena Smelter Facility, officials said.

The hauling is expected to begin in April and continue for five years, federal officials said. The plan is to remove 20,000 tons a month initially.

Officials said the 2 million tons that will be removed represent the most contaminated portion of the slag pile. 

Cindy Brooks, managing principal of the Montana Environmental Trust Group, which controls both the smelter site and ASARCO-owned lands, said they have entered into an agreement with Metallica Commodities Corp. of White Plains, New York, to move the unfumed slag.

She said Metallica is an international metals trader. She said unfumed slag did not go to the zinc plant, so it has recoverable zinc. Slag is the glasslike byproduct left over after a metal has been smelted.

Officials said Montana Rail Link has started to build a railroad spur onto the property in order to haul the slag to Longview, Washington, where it will then be sent overseas. Brooks said it will be sent to the largest zinc smelting facility in the world in South Korea, where zinc and other materials will be extracted. 

The Environmental Protection Agency and the Montana Environmental Trust Group discussed the project during an online meeting via Zoom Tuesday night. About 50 participants listened in and viewed an hour-long multi-slide presentation that focused on cleanup and redevelopment of the site.

Contamination including arsenic and selenium in soils at the site have caused groundwater plumes and levels above safe drinking water standards.

Brooks said the “takedown plan” is to start removing 20,000 tons a month starting in April, and later increase that to 30,000 tons a month.

She said the final corrective measure for the site is to regrade and put a vegetative cover over the slag pile. That will be done after the removal is complete.

Brooks said the slag pile is the last major source of selenium to groundwater. She said it produces about 75% of the selenium loading into the groundwater on the site today.

“Overall, implementation of this project will save money on the actual final regrading and capping,” Brooks said, adding that some proceeds will go into the East Helena cleanup account that can be used for future remediation actions.

Brooks said construction on the rail link property has started. She said the slag will be crushed to 2 inches in size and loaded onto conveyors and eventually loaded into trains of 95 cars per train. She said there will be measures to suppress dust.

She said everything is taking place on the plant site, including the rail-loading process.

East Helena Mayor James Schell was happy with the news.

“It’s fascinating and we are very lucky we are chosen to ship that product,” he said Wednesday, adding he has some skepticism, as such projects have been proposed elsewhere in the past.

He said passersby will certainly notice a decrease in the slag pile as they pass through the town of 2,000 residents.

He said it was the first time the South Korea project had been publicly announced. He said the deal was reached through efforts by the EPA, the METG, Montana Rail Link and Montana Department of Environmental Quality.

Officials said Tuesday there has been improvement in groundwater quality and that long-term monitoring and more corrective measures may be added, based on those results.

The East Helena site includes a lead smelter that operated from 1888-2001. The METG says on its website the slag pile occupies almost half of the ASARCO smelter property. In its heyday, the smelter processed 70,000 tons of lead bullion a year, and provided a livelihood for thousands. However, it also produced tons of contaminants. In 1984, the EPA declared East Helena a Superfund Cleanup Site, the website states.

Lead and zinc smelting operations deposited heavy metals, arsenic and other hazardous chemicals into the soil, surface water and groundwater of the Helena Valley, the EPA said. It noted the sources of the contamination included the smelter stack, emissions from the plant operations, process ponds and direct surface water discharges.

Historically, air and surface water was the way in which the contaminants were transported. Cleanup at the site, which involves a 140-acre former facility and about 2,000 acres around the smelter property, is ongoing.

In September, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit reduced the amount of money Atlantic Richfield Co. (ARCO) must contribute to the site’s cleanup. ARCO, successor to Anaconda Copper Mining Co., operated a zinc fuming plant from 1927-1972. It then sold the plant to the American Smelting and Refining Co. (ASARCO), which operated it for another decade.

In 1998, there was a multimillion-dollar settlement between ASARCO and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for violations of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act and the Clean Water Act.

The smelter closed in 2001, and after later declaring bankruptcy, ASARCO placed about $96 million in a trust managed by the Montana Environmental Trust Group. The state of Montana is a beneficiary in the trust via the Montana Department of Environmental Quality and the Montana Department of Justice, along with the EPA.

A U.S. District Court found ASARCO had spent nearly $111.4 million in cleanup costs and that ARCO was responsible for 25% of the total cost, about $27.9 million. The court also added a $1 million award to ASARCO due to ARCO'S "failure to cooperate with authorities and its misrepresentations to the EPA and to Asarco."

Schell said he will remain skeptical until he actually sees the slag being moved.

“So many promises have been made to so many cities around Montana for this type of activity,” he said.

Nolan Lister of the Independent Record contributed to this story.