EPA Inks Clean-up Agreement with Montana Aluminum Plant
Glencore will fund work to cap contaminated waste and address arsenic, fluoride and cyanide as the cleanup plan moves to public review.
- On Tuesday, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced an agreement with Columbia Falls Aluminum Company requiring the owner to pay $57.6 million toward cleaning up the 1,340-acre industrial site near the Flathead River.
- The agreement comes 15 years after the plant closed and eight years after the site was added to the National Priorities List, marking a major milestone for the Flathead Valley's former largest employer.
- While a local group pushed for total toxin removal, the EPA decided on a "waste in place" strategy, determining that hauling materials to a landfill would incur excessive cost and risk.
- The 647-page agreement now enters a 30-day public comment period, followed by review in the U.S. District Court in Missoula before official adoption.
- Developers plan a 421-unit residential project at Teakettle Heights nearby, while Coalition for a Clean CFAC President Tony Haag said his group will monitor remediation to ensure the work is done well.
17 Articles
17 Articles
EPA inks clean-up agreement with Montana aluminum plant
The owner of a sprawling, long-shuttered aluminum plant in Columbia Falls has agreed to pay $57.6 million to mitigate pollution associated with decades of aluminum smelting.
EPA inks clean-up agreement with Columbia Falls aluminum plant: CFAC owner Glencore to pay nearly $58 million to clean up toxins from decades smelting
The owner of a sprawling, long-shuttered aluminum plant in Columbia Falls has agreed to pay $57.6 million to mitigate pollution associated with decades of aluminum smelting.
EPA inks clean-up agreement with Columbia Falls aluminum plant
The agreement between the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Columbia Falls Aluminum Corporation comes about a decade after the 1,300-acre industrial heart of the aluminium smelting site joined the Superfund list. The post EPA inks clean-up agreement with Columbia Falls aluminum plant appeared first on Montana Free Press.
Keep your sediment to yourself, EPA tells site managers
Victoria has had an unusually warm start to winter, but the rain is still falling and bringing with it the risk of exposed soil being washed off farms and construction sites and into our waterways. Particularly after dry spells, rainfall picks up areas of bare… Read more The post Keep your sediment to yourself, EPA tells site managers appeared first on Star Weekly.
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