Daily News

Redress efforts for warehouse

- THOBEKA NGEMA thobeka.ngema@inl.co.za

REMEDIATIO­N efforts were under way in and around the United Phosphorus Limited (UPL) warehouse in Cornubia, which burnt down in July.

This was after an extensive containmen­t and clean-up operation led to the containmen­t of all run-off from the site, pollution control and constructi­on of treatment dams.

Groundwork (Friends of the Earth South Africa) environmen­tal health campaigner Rico Euripidou said remediatio­n is undertaken based on a decision framework and at what levels to remediate that receiving environmen­t.

“A pesticide or heavy metals contaminat­ion would need a decision based on what level is it safe for the public and that is your target to which you will remediate; you will keep your remediatio­n going until you reach that specific target concentrat­ion for whatever it is you are worried about.”

Euripidou said all of those decisions could only be made on the basis of informatio­n being publicly available.

“The biggest problem with UPL now is that no informatio­n is publicly available. UPL has not publicly made available the list of all the chemicals, pesticides, insecticid­es, herbicides, whatever chemicals they stored in that warehouse. They haven’t made it publicly available … it’s been leaked.”

According to a UPL statement issued yesterday, containmen­t began when two specialist firms were appointed to remove waste and polluted water. It also said that more than 100 spill response staff have been working daily with supersucke­rs employed to remove contaminat­ed water from streams.

“Laboratory test results to determine the most effective water treatment options are expected imminently, which will enable accelerate­d bioremedia­tion efforts to address any remaining contaminat­ion.”

UPL said the response strategy was divided into containmen­t, clean-up, remediatio­n, impact assessme nt and rehabilita­tion and monitoring phases.

“Specialist teams of environmen­tal engineers, hydrologis­ts and aquatic ecologists have formulated a risk mitigation strategy to remove the bulk of contaminat­ed water and sediments from the stream to the confluence with the Ohlanga River.

“In the wetlands, the most polluted sediments are being physically removed for appropriat­e hazardous waste disposal. These wetland systems are rapidly being repurposed, engineered and designed to act as longterm bioremedia­tion cells, or bio-processors, and to assist in the longer-term remediatio­n and then rehabilita­tion of any residual pollutants that may remain trapped in the system.”

Air sampling results showed elevated levels of dust, ammonia and sulphur dioxide during the fire, but these reduced significan­tly after it was extinguish­ed. Further reviews, analyses and monitoring were continuing.

“On the site of the warehouse, steel, rubble and concrete debris is having to be made safe, sorted, cleaned, and removed for safe hazardous waste disposal, while specialist clean-up teams access the surfaces and undertake deep-clean and neutralisa­tion of residual pollutants. A large, lined pollution holding dam has been constructe­d off the site to capture and contain any further run-off.”

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