The Columbus Dispatch

Coal ash: ‘Why in the world would we be importing it?’

- By Sarah Rankin

RICHMOND, Va. — Shipping containers full of coal ash from China, Poland and India have come into the U.S. through the Port of Virginia as foreign companies find a market for the same industrial waste that America’s utilities are struggling to dispose of.

Critics call it a missed opportunit­y. Coal ash is treasure as well as trash, useful for projects from roads to concrete to wallboard. They want Virginia to mandate more recycling of the ash that’s already here, threatenin­g to contaminat­e water sources or create an environmen­tal disaster.

“We have millions of tons of this sitting along our riverbanks,” said Travis Blankenshi­p, former government affairs manager for the Virginia League of Conservati­on Voters. “Why in the world would we be importing it from other states and countries?”

The nation’s shift away from coal for electricit­y has reduced the supply of fresh coal ash, forcing industries that depend on it to look farther afield. Some turn to companies that have figured out how to reprocess ash discarded years ago in pits and ponds. Others look overseas.

The Port of Virginia handled just one shipping container of coal ash in 2015, from India. Last year, there were about 22, from China and Poland. It all went on to Ohio and Wisconsin, according to a port spokesman who didn’t know the final destinatio­ns. Meanwhile, more ash has been trucked in from other states for concrete production in Virginia.

Coal ash is an umbrella term. It includes bottom ash, which settles in boilers; fly ash, a powdery material captured in exhaust stacks; and synthetic gypsum, a byproduct of smokestack “scrubbing.”

These materials can be had for several dollars a ton if trucked directly from a utility to a factory or job site. They’re more expensive to obtain in a useful form after decades undergroun­d or underwater. That makes foreign imports economical­ly viable.

Nationally, there are more than 1,100 coal ash dumps, many unlined. In 2014, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency classified coal ash as nonhazardo­us, partly to avoid a “stigma” that might discourage proper containmen­t and recycling, the agency said.

The EPA stressed that this waste, with heavy metals such as arsenic, mercury and lead, must be properly managed to avoid risks to human health.

“We have two children who have been poisoned by this,” Dan Marrow, who lives near a coal ash pond in northern Virginia, told lawmakers last month.

 ?? [THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] ?? A drain pipe sticks out of a coal ash retention pond at Dominion Power’s Possum Point Power Station in Dumfries, Va. The company is moving coal ash from several ponds to one lined pond. As Virginia and its public utilities struggle to cope with the...
[THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] A drain pipe sticks out of a coal ash retention pond at Dominion Power’s Possum Point Power Station in Dumfries, Va. The company is moving coal ash from several ponds to one lined pond. As Virginia and its public utilities struggle to cope with the...

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