
The North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources knew since at least last August that Duke Energy was illegally polluting the Dan River with coal ash, yet the agency did nothing about it.
That inaction proved to be disastrous, when seven months later, Duke Energy employees discovered Duke Energy’s coal ash pond in Eden was leaking 30,000–39,000 tons of coal ash and contaminated material into the river, the third-largest such accident in North Carolina history.
In the weeks following the Feb. 2 spill, Duke Energy and DENR, under Gov. Pat McCrorya 28-year employee of the utilityhave come under federal investigation. The details of that investigation have not been released, but close observers think the probe will focus on how DENR used the federal Clean Water Act to run interference for Duke Energy.
“The Clean Water Act delegates responsibility and authority to this agency to enforce the law,” DENR Secretary John Skvarla said at a press conference last Wednesday, adding that DENR didn’t hesitate to “initiate action.”
However, DENR’s own data, collected from 2011–2013, shows that the groundwater near Duke Energy’s Dan River plant had been contaminated with toxic coal ash but the agency did nothing about it. Meanwhile, it used legal maneuvers to prevent citizens groups from suing the utility.
“They could have let us file and we could have worked together but he scrambled to prevent us from bringing our own lawsuit,” said Frank Holleman, an attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center, which tried to sue Duke Energy under the Clean Water Act three times, only to be thwarted by DENR. “They did everything they could to hinder our ability to be effective.”
DENR officials stated last August that they knew about “unpermitted seeps”direct flows of polluted water into the Dan River at Duke Energy’s Combined Cycle Station in Edenaccording to court documents.
And from 2011 to 2013, the agency’s own sampling showed levels of antimony, arsenic and boron that exceeded federal health standards (see box, page 9).
Holleman of the SELC said that during court proceedings DENR acknowledged that if the violations were not corrected they posed a “serious danger” to the health, safety and welfare of the people of North Carolina and could cause “serious harm” to the water resources of the state.
“The Division of Water Resources staff is working with [Duke Energy],” court documents state, “to determine if these exceedances are naturally occurring or if corrective action will be required.”
Instead of requiring corrective action, DENR negotiated a consent agreement with Duke Energy to pay a $60,200 fine for coal ash pollution at its Asheville site and another $38,911 for its Riverband/Mountain Island Lake location.
In addition, the penalty did not include any clean-up provisions or conditions that the company change how it stores toxic substances.
To put this into context, Duke Energy reported earnings of $2.68 billion last year. The largest water quality fine DENR has recently imposed is $184,000 on the Onslow Water and Sewer Authority in November 2011, according to the agency’s online enforcement database.
It was only after the Dan River spill earlier this month that DENR asked a judge to withdraw the consent agreement with Duke. Coincidentally, this happened on the same day news broke that U.S. attorneys were launching a criminal investigation into the incident. There has not yet been a ruling.
According to DENR communications director Drew Elliot, who is a former employee of Duke Energy subsidiary Progress Energy, the DENR decided to pull the consent agreement before learning the first subpoena had been issued for the federal investigation.
“Any implication or allegation that DENR and Duke Energy got together to make some smoky, backroom deal with a nominal fine is just not true,” Skvarla said at the press conference. “We are taking what could be a 12-to-15 year (litigation) process and compressing it to what might be a five-to-six year process.”
When citizens groups were trying to sue Duke Energy during the prelude to the Dan River spill, DENR pushed the limits of the Clean Water Act in the utility’s favor. The Clean Water Act allows state environmental agencies and citizens to sue companies, but with one caveat: The plaintiff has to give the defendant 60 days’ notice to clean up the pollution and notify the state of its intent to sue.
Within that 60 days, if the state also sues the company, the citizens’ role in the lawsuit is limited.
Against that legal backdrop, the DENR-Duke deal started more than a year ago. On Jan. 24, 2013, the SELC sent a 60-day notice to DENR and Duke Energy of their intent to sue the company under the Clean Water Act on behalf of the Sierra Club, the Waterkeeper Alliance and the Western North Carolina Alliance, over coal ash pollution at the facility in Asheville.
In late March, on Day 57, DENR filed its own complaint against Duke Energy at the Asheville facility, thus cutting off the SELC.
In March, the SELC filed a second notice of intent to sue Duke Energy on behalf of the Catawba Riverkeeper Foundation, for pollution at the Mountain Island Lake facility in Riverbend. In late May, on Day 59, DENR filed suit against Duke Energy for pollution at the same facility, again thwarting the SELC.
On June 19, the SELC filed a third notice of intent to sue for pollution at Duke Energy’s Sutton lake facility in Wilmington.
On July 3rd, attorneys for the state representing DENR asked a judge to limit the participation of conservation groups in the agency’s lawsuit against Duke Energy.
At that hearing, Duke Energy attorneys told the court about the SELC’s third notice of intent to sue. They complained that Duke would likely receive a total of 14 such notices, one for each site in the state.
In an attempt to preempt more citizen filings, DENR filed suit against Duke on the utility’s 11 remaining coal ash ponds in North Carolina. One of them was the Dan River site.
DENR and Duke Energy rushed to negotiate a settlement.
Citizens’ groups got a break on Aug. 9, when Wake County Superior Court Judge Ridgeway granted them the right to intervene in DENR’s complaint against Duke Energy as full parties. Even so, a spokesperson for the SELC said, “DENR has resisted citizen conservation group participation every step of the way. DENR is legally barred from objecting to our intervention, but it refused to consent. Even then, its attorney attempted to limit our participation in oral argument at the intervention hearing.”
Despite overwhelming public opposition, DENR submitted its proposed settlement to Court for approval Oct. 4and there it stalled until the Dan River spill in early February.
DENR became responsible for regulating coal ash in 2009, after a massive spill in Kingston, Tenn. brought the issue to the public’s attention. In 2010, all coal ash ponds were found to be in compliance with North Carolina statutes, according to Skvarla.
Skvarla has said that until Gov. McCrory appointed him as DENR secretary in 2013, no citizen or government agency has taken enforcement action on coal ash pollution in North Carolina.
Yet the SELC has been doing coal ash litigation work in the Carolinas since 2011. Last year in South Carolina, the SELC sent a notice of intent to sue to Santee Cooper and to that state’s Department of Health and Environmental Control, for coal ash pollution in one of the utility’s facilities.
Unlike North Carolina, the S.C. DHEC did not file suit within the 60-day period; the SELC sued Santee Cooper. As part of a settlement, Santee Cooper agreed to remove its coal ash from 12 storage lagoons and put it into lined landfills or recycle it.
According to Holleman, of the three major utilities companies in North and South Carolina that store coal ashSantee Cooper, SCE&G and Dukethe former two have agreed to remove their coal ash from unlined ponds located near rivers and store it in lined landfills or recycle it.
Only Duke Energy has refused.
Duke Energy has already proposed its own low-cost method for dealing with coal ash ponds: Leave the coal ash in place, even if it is near waterways and reservoirs, and simply cap it off. Skvarla said Duke needed a year of due diligence to investigate other alternatives. Last week, Paige Sheehan, a Duke Energy spokeswoman, acknowledged the utility is reviewing how the utility disposes of the coal ash waste.
“We agree that ash basins need to be addressed and we’re taking another look at the best way to approach that work,” Sheehan said.
Skvarlawho has cast doubt on the accepted science behind climate changesaid he is skeptical about whether the method of removing coal ash to be stored in lined landfills is the best way to deal with coal ash pollution
“Some scientists say that is the worst thing that could happen to the environment,” Skvarla said. “The answer is nobody knows.”
The contaminated Dan River
Arsenic is the most toxic of the three contaminants found in the Dan River as a result of the coal ash spill. Chronic exposure, such as drinking contaminated water over time, can cause cancer.
Short-term exposure can result in arsenic poisoning, affecting the skin, digestive, nervous and respiratory systems.
Antimony ingestion affects the cardiovascular and respiratory systems in humans and short-term exposure looks similar to arsenic poisoning.
When inhaled, boron is toxic to plants, fish and insects, and to humans. It affects the cardiovascular system and organ development.
All three elements are naturally occurring in groundwater, but samples taken from near the Dan River Combined Cycle Station from January 2011 through July 16, 2013 show all three to be “in exceedance” of permitted standards, according to the lawsuit DENR brought against Duke Energy for violations at 12 facilities across the state.
Duke’s coal ash pond discharges into the Dan River, a source of drinking water for the town of Eden, N.C., and Danville, Va.
The permitted concentration of antimony in groundwater is 1 part per billion (ppb). In September 2011 and May 2012, antimony was found to be at concentration levels of 1.19 ppb and 1.3 ppb respectively. During four samplings from January 2012 to May 2013, concentrations ranging form 1.1. ppb to 1.6 ppb were found.
The Groundwater Standard for arsenic is 10 ppb. During eight samplings from January 2011 to May 2013, concentrations ranged from 21 ppb to 45 ppb.
The Groundwater Standard for boron is 700 ppb. During three samplings from January 2012 to January 2013, concentrations ranged from 711 ppb to 793 ppb; during one sampling in May 2013, a concentration of 903 ppb was found.
“(The element’s) presence in groundwater and specific occurrence at this site indicates impacts to groundwater from resulting from the wastewater treatment and disposal associated with coal-burning activities,” DENR’s lawsuit states.
Ash spill timeline
Jan. 24, 2013: The Southern Environmental Law Center, on behalf of several environmental groups, sent a 60-day notice to DENR and Duke Energy of their intent to sue the company over coal ash pollution at the facility in Asheville.
March 22, 2013: On Day 57, DENR filed its own complaint against Duke Energy at the Asheville facility, thus cutting off the SELC.
March 25, 2013: The SELC filed a second notice of intent to sue Duke Energy for pollution at the Mountain Island Lake facility in Riverbend.
April 12, 2013: SELC made a motion in court to intervene in DENR’s state cases against Duke Energy.
May 24, 2013: On Day 59, DENR filed suit against Duke Energy for pollution at the Mountain Island Lake facility, again thwarting the SELC.
June 6, 2013: SELC made a motion in court to intervene in DENR’s state cases against Duke Energy.
June 19, 2013: The SELC filed a third notice of intent to sue for pollution at Duke Energy’s Sutton Lake facility in Wilmington.
July 3, 2013: Attorneys for the state representing DENR asked a judge to limit the participation of conservation groups in the agency’s lawsuit against Duke Energy.
July 15, 2013: DENR releases proposed settlement with Duke Energy for public comment.
Aug. 9, 2013: Wake County Superior Court Judge Ridgeway granted the SELC and citizens’ groups the right to intervene in DENR’s complaint against Duke Energy as full parties.
August 2013: In response to SELC’s notice of intent to sue in June, DENR pre-emptively filed suit against Duke Energy’s remaining 11 coal-ash sites in North Carolina.
Oct. 4, 2013: Despite overwhelming public opposition, DENR submitted its proposed settlement to Court for approval Oct. 4and there it stalled until the Dan River spill on Feb. 2, 2014.
Feb. 12, 2014: DENR asked the Court to consider suspending the proposed settlement while it studies what happened at the Dan River site. Federal government opens investigation into DENR and Duke Energy.
How DENR ran interference for Duke Energy and let the Dan River spill happen was originally posted on INDY Week on Monday, February 24th. However, this page, posted on Wednesday, February 26th is more current and contains updated information.
This article appeared in print with the headline “The canary in the coal ash.”