The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Firm gets Ga. notice of violation for toxic gas emissions

Ethylene oxide from warehouse exceeds limits, regulators say.

- By Meris Lutz mlutz@ajc.com

State regulators issued a notice of violation Wednesday to a Newton County sterilizat­ion plant after air sampling showed its offsite warehouse could be emitting 5,600 pounds a year of ethylene oxide, a carcinogen­ic gas.

Becton Dickinson of Covington is one of several facilities across the state that are legally permitted to use ethylene oxide to sterilize medical equipment. Its warehouse is used to store sterilized devices and is a separate facility about a mile and a half from the company’s main sterilizat­ion building.

The notice from the Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division said BD’s warehouse emissions are so high that the company should have obtained a permit for its operations there.

The notice calls on thecompany to comply with a list of remedial actions, including effectivel­y suspending operations at the warehouse for new product from Dec. 23 to Jan. 6.

It also seeks regular air monitoring at nearby residences and the closest school.

BD has until 1 p.m. Friday to respond to the notice. If the company refuses to comply, the case will likely end up in court.

“The Notice of Violation is the first step in EPD’s enforcemen­t process,” the agency said in a statement. “As prescribed by statute, the Notice of Violation’s conditions are not binding unless included in a consent agreement or other order. EPD will evaluate BD’s response ... as it considers potential next steps, including assessment of fines or other enforcemen­t actions.”

In October, the two sides reached an agreement for BD to temporaril­y close after air sampling found elevated levels of the gas in surroundin­g areas. The plant has since resumed operations, but increased aeration time for sterilized products and implemente­d additional monitoring per the agreement with the state.

In a letter to regulators dated Dec. 15, BD said air sampling results from inside the warehouse came back “higher than anticipate­d.” Because gas in the warehouse does not pass through pollution controls, it is considered “fugitive” emissions.

The company previously told environmen­tal regulators that its total 2017 emissions for the sterilizat­ion facility alone were 657.4 pounds, including both treated and fugitive emissions.

Based on this most recent sampling, BD estimates the warehouse is emitting 0.65 pounds per hour — that’s 475.5 pounds a month and 5,694 pounds a year.

Legally, any facility emitting more than 4,000 pounds a year must obtain a permit.

The issue of ethylene oxide emissions exploded in Georgia over the summer after reporting by Georgia Health News and WedMD highlighte­d potential increased long-term risk of cancer in census tracts near BD and the Sterigenic­s facility in Cobb County.

Those potential risks were based on a 2018 federal study by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

In its letter to state regulators, BD said it was already taking action to address the unexpected­ly high emissions, including increasing employee exposure monitoring. The company is also pursuing FDA approval for an alternativ­e sterilizat­ion process that uses less ethylene oxide, it said.

“We know that more data will be needed to better understand the impacts of product off-gassing,” the letter reads. “We are now putting real world informatio­n to parts of the supply chain not evaluated before [...].”

“Off-gassing” is the term that refers to aerating sterilized products.

Gov. Brian Kemp called the air test results “highly concerning” in a statement and accused BD of “unlawful activity.”

“Ultimately, we expect the company to comply with our requests and do the right thing for Newton County families,” he said.

Covington Mayor Ronnie Johnston he’s glad “the state is on top of it.”

“I don’t think any of us were worried about the warehouse,” Johnston said. “I am just glad ... we had the consent order in place and they’re holding [BD] accountabl­e to make sure our community is safe.”

The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reached out to BD for comment but did not hear back by press time.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Becton Dickinson of Covington is one of several facilities in Georgia legally permitted to use ethylene oxide to sterilize medical equipment. Its warehouse to store sterilized devices is a mile and a half from the main sterilizat­ion building.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Becton Dickinson of Covington is one of several facilities in Georgia legally permitted to use ethylene oxide to sterilize medical equipment. Its warehouse to store sterilized devices is a mile and a half from the main sterilizat­ion building.

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