“Mildly Radioactive”

Nov. 23, 2016

Those of us concerned with surface water quality generally keep a wary eye on the amount of nutrients entering our lakes and rivers. Nitrogen and phosphorus from fertilizers—much of it from agricultural lands, some from urban stormwater runoff—are a big contributor to algae blooms and dead zones, and in high concentrations in the drinking water supply, nutrients can pose dangers to human health as well.

We give a great deal of thought to where the fertilizer ends up, but somewhat less to where it comes from. Some of it, such as phosphate fertilizer that’s been essential to corn and soybean farming in the US, comes from mines, and these in themselves are controversial because of the waste products they generate.

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Recently in Mulberry, FL, a fertilizer company experienced what its chief executive termed “a very unfortunate event” when a sinkhole opened up beneath a pile of that waste, dumping millions of gallons of acidic water into an aquifer that serves as a drinking water supply. The aquifer also received “unknown quantities of phosphogypsum, a mildly radioactive fertilizer byproduct,” as this article reports. The company is now working to repair the sinkhole by patching it with concrete, pumping the contaminated water out of the aquifer, and paying to monitor potentially affected drinking water wells through 2018, all of which will cost about $60 million, with another $40 million due to the state if it fails to follow through. So far, water samples from wells in the area have shown no contamination.

Although this was an unexpected incident—and really bad luck about the sinkhole—there are many other examples of contamination from fertilizer waste. Florida produces about 70% of the country’s phosphate rock, from which phosphate fertilizer is processed. Phosphogypsum is produced in large quantities and is stored in so-called gyp stacks. As the article notes, “Collectively, they cover thousands of acres and each can reach 500 feet high.” A spokesperson for the Sierra Club says, “Each is a disaster waiting to happen.” More than 20 years ago a sinkhole opened at this same fertilizer plant, but was quickly repaired. The company that currently owns the plant has paid to clean up hazardous waste from its plants in Florida and Louisiana, and a different Florida company went bankrupt in 2001, abandoning a plant; in that case, state officials disposed of the hazardous wastewater in the Gulf of Mexico.

Environmental groups are calling for either stricter regulations or a freeze on mining permits until a better way is found to deal with the byproducts of the mining process. Some are calling for an outright ban on fertilizer production.

Does your area have problems with nutrients and groundwater or surface water—seasonal algae blooms, or worse?

StormCon Call for Papers Deadline Is December 7

StormCon, the only North American event dedicated exclusively to stormwater and surface-water professionals, is seeking abstracts for presentation at StormCon 2017, which will take place in Seattle on August 27–31, 2017. The deadline for submitting abstracts is Wednesday, December 7, 2016.

We are accepting abstracts in six conference tracks: BMP Case Studies, Green Infrastructure, Stormwater Program Management, Water-Quality Monitoring, Industrial Stormwater Management, and Advanced Research Topics. For descriptions of the tracks and more information about submitting an abstract, please visit www.StormCon.com.
About the Author

Janice Kaspersen

Janice Kaspersen is the editor of Erosion Control and Stormwater magazines. She works with experts throughout the erosion and sediment control industry and the stormwater industry to produce articles relevant to professionals working in both of these fields. Topics covered regularly in the magazines include best management practices for erosion control and stormwater management; green infrastructure, such as bioswales, rain gardens, pervious pavement, and rainwater harvesting systems, as a supplement to traditional “gray” infrastructure; stormwater management and erosion and sediment control techniques for construction sites; urban retrofit and redevelopment; and the many evolving Clean Water Act regulations. She has researched and written articles on topics ranging from coastal erosion to stormwater program funding.

Janice also puts together the speaker program portion of Forester Media’s StormCon, the North American Surface Water Quality Conference and Exposition, which is in its fourteenth year. The annual StormCon conference brings together surface water professionals, engineers, municipal program managers, researchers, regulators, and others concerned with water quality. Conference program tracks include Best Management Practices, Green Infrastructure, Stormwater Program Management, Water-Quality Monitoring, Advanced Research, and Industrial Stormwater Management.

Before joining Forester Media, Janice worked as a technical writer and editor for a government research laboratory. She has a degree in English and anthropology from the University of Arizona. She holds a certification from the Board of Editors in the Life Sciences.

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