|
+Click to Enlarge
|
 |
Hot Spots. Samplers
identify dredging targets. (Photo courtesy of General
Electric;) |
In a consent decree
signed October 6, the General Electric Co has agreed to dredge
the hottest areas of PCB-contaminated sediment in the Hudson
River and to build a sediment transfer and processing facility.
The work could cost between $100 million to $150 million and
is scheduled for a 2007 completion.
Fairfield, Conn.-based GE, the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Justice
Dept. reached an agreement in federal district court in Albany,
N.Y. The pact stipulates that GE will also pay EPA $78 million
for past and future enforcement costs. A five-year final clean-up
will follow an initial phase 1 performance review. "This
is a major breakthrough for all friends of the Hudson River
because it commits GE to begin dredging and to remove the
contamination," says EPA Region 2 Administrator Alan
J. Steinberg. GE has already paid $37 million in a previous
settlement.
In compliance with a 2002 Record
of Decision, GE had already engaged Quantitative Environmental
Analysis, Glens Falls, N.Y., to conduct extensive river bottom
sampling program to identify areas for dredging . GE also
hired Blasland, Bouck and Lee, Syracuse, N.Y., to lead the
engineering work, spending about $100 million to date. "They
were under an enforcement decree with EPA and tested 48,000
sediment samples from 2003-2004. We used the results to target
areas for remediation," says George Pavlou, EPA Region
2 Superfund division director.
Until 1977 GE had discharged 30-years
worth of polychlorinated biphenyls from two upstream manufacturing
plants. The contaminants, about 1.1-million pounds in total,
turned the Hudson River into a Superfund site. PCBs were used
as insulation in capacitors and there is a documented and
tested contaminated 40-mile- long stretch running south from
Hudson Falls to the Federal Dam in Troy. For the cleanup the
run is divided into three segments: 6 miles, 5 miles and 29
miles long. Work in the initial phase will take place in the
first segment. Up to seven closed- bucket environmental clamshell
dredges could be used on the project.
PCBs are an environmental and health
hazard. Total river cleanup costs are estimated at around
$460 million to remove 2.65 million cu yds containing about
150,000 pounds of PCBs. About 10% of total volume will be
cleaned in the first phase located around Rogers Island and
Griffin Island, near Ft. Edward, the source of contamination.
It contains on average 62.5 parts per million of contamination.
Spoils will be cleaned to 1 ppm for triplus PCBs. Those most
toxic PCBs have three or more chlorine molecules.
The dewatering
facility, located in Ft. Edward, will consist of perhaps
five enclosed structures--each 100-ft wide by 400-ft long
on concrete slab foundations--a 1,450-ft long marine terminal
and 38,000 ft of rail spur. A contractor has not yet been
selected. It will process 4,000 cu yds of sediment per day
and could be the largest of any treatment facilities in the
country. About 2 million gals of water per day will also be
treated to state water quality discharge standards. Each week
390,000 tons of process material will be transported off site
in 250 rail cars to a site as yet to be determined. According
to the EPA, only five states have disposal facilities that
can handle the material: Idaho, Michigan, Utah, Texas, and
Oregon. "We have submitted an intermediate design report,
which is undergoing review. It should be finalized next year.
Then the final design will be subject to EPA approval and
we will start construction on phase 1 infrastructure,"
says Mark Behan, GE spokesman. "The dewatering facility
will treat more than 1 billion gals of water over the life
of the project."
Here
is a schematic of the Ft. Edward dewatering facility.
(967
kb)
|