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Toxics Release Inventory Shows Progress in New Jersey
Release Date: 03/19/2009
Contact Information: Elias Rodriguez (212) 637-3664, [email protected]
(New York, N.Y.) What if you wanted to know how many pounds of toxic air pollutants were being generated by your local power plant? Or how many pounds of toxic chemicals were being released by a factory near your child’s school? The latest Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) report issued today by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) can help answer these questions. It finds a decrease in releases to the air and water in New Jersey. EPA’s database provides the most recent information available about the amount of toxic chemicals released into the environment of New Jersey by permitted industrial and other facilities. Since 1988, TRI data has been released to the public annually to help people learn more about the chemicals present in their local environment and gauge environmental trends over time.
“Overall TRI trends show that companies have significantly reduced the amount of toxic chemicals they're using and releasing over the last decade,” said George Pavlou, Acting EPA Regional Administrator. “By issuing TRI data, EPA is empowering the public. People become aware of what is happening in their own backyards, businesses become more sensitive about how much they use and release into the environment, and governments get to know where to focus their local efforts.”
The latest TRI report, which displays calendar year 2007 data gathered by EPA, shows a decrease in total on-site releases to the air, water and land of 6% in N.J. and a 21% decrease in releases to the Garden State’s air. In part, this improvement is due to EPA’s prior enforcement action at the PSEG Hudson County power plant, which reduced its toxic chemicals release by 1.5 million pounds in 2007. On the other hand, the N.J. data did show a 21% increase in nitrate compounds discharged into the waterways in water.
TRI is the most comprehensive inventory of information about chemicals released into the environment reported annually by certain industries and federal facilities. These facilities are permitted under strict federal regulations and required to install and maintain pollution controls. On a national level, over 21,000 facilities reported on approximately 650 chemicals for calendar year 2007. TRI allows the public to see which facilities are increasing and decreasing their output of toxic chemicals and compounds, so that stakeholders are well informed about chemicals released into their communities, and industries can gauge their progress in reducing pollution. Thanks to improvements in EPA’s system, the vast majority of facilities now report data electronically and detailed information about specific facilities is more readily accessible to the public.
Today's data is released according to the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act of 1986 and its amendments, as well as the Pollution Prevention Act of 1990, and it includes toxics released at company facilities and those transported to disposal facilities off site. All manufacturing companies, as well as coal and oil fired power plants, that produce or use above the threshold limit for any chemical are required to participate. The data are collected from industries that are in the following sectors: manufacturing, metal and coal mining, electric utilities, commercial hazardous waste treatment, chemical distributors, solvent recyclers and petroleum bulk storage as well as federal facilities.
TRI provides the amount, location and type of release to the environment -- whether a pollutant is emitted into the air, discharged into the water, or released onto the land. Additionally, TRI has been credited with providing communities with vital local knowledge and encouraging facilities to reduce their releases of toxic chemicals into the environment through source reduction or pollution prevention measures
For more TRI information, visit: https://www.epa.gov/tri/index.htm
To view an area fact sheet, visit: https://www.epa.gov/triexplorer/statefactsheet.htm
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