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New Report Raises Questions Over Groundwater Contamination At Coal Ash Sites

Duke Energy's Belews Creek plant in Stokes County. KERI BROWN/WFDD

A new report by environmental groups says some North Carolina coal ash sites are contaminating groundwater. Researchers hope state regulators will consider the information as they decide on closure plans for remaining ash basins.

The Environmental Integrity Project and Earthjustice conducted the study. They examined the records of 265 power plants across the country. The information became available to the public last year because of federal coal ash regulations that require companies to disclose it.

Researchers say the data shows that most of the sites are leaking arsenic, lead and other toxic metals into groundwater.

The report also ranks what it calls the 10 worst pollution sites nationally. Among the list: Duke Energy's Allen Steam Station in Belmont.

“In North Carolina there are 13 coal plants that are covered by the coal ash rule and have reported their ground water data, so 13 plants that we looked at, and all 13 of them have unsafe levels of coal ash pollutants in the ground water,” says Abel Russ an attorney with the Environmental Integrity Project. “Nationally, it's 91 percent. In North Carolina, it's 100 percent.”

Russ says he doesn't know the extent to which nearby drinking water supplies have been impacted by coal ash contamination. The data in this report doesn't prove that. He says he worries about older coal ash sites, where there's limited data. Some of them were given exemptions or closed before the federal coal ash rule took effect.

“There are hundreds of ash landfills and ponds across the country that aren't regulated. The owners don't have to tell us anything about them, where they are, that even exist, how much coal ash they have in them," he says.

Duke Energy spokesperson Bill Norton says the study is misleading and that pollution from leaking pits is staying on their property and not affecting local drinking water or recreational water supplies.

“This is old data that environmentalists have tried to repackage to create a new news cycle, and they're trying to advance a misleading narrative that pushes excavation of ash as the only solution when the science is really clear that capping and excavation are both equally safe for neighbors and the environment.”

Norton adds, “The situation at Allen is the same as the situation at our other sites where we have issues in the groundwater within our property not affecting drinking water supplies or recreational water supplies. That's determined by hundreds of monitoring wells that we have encircling the basin that show exactly where the water is going.”

The North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality is still reviewing the company's closure plans for six remaining sites.

State law known as the Coal Ash Management Act requires Duke Energy to close all of its ash basins by 2029.

*You can follow WFDD's Keri Brown on Twitter @kerib_news

Keri Brown is a multi-award winning reporter and host at 88.5 WFDD. She has been honored with two regional Edward R. Murrow awards for her stories about coal ash, and was named the 2015 radio reporter of the year by the Radio Television Digital News Association of the Carolinas (RTDNAC).Although she covers a variety of topics, her beats are environmental and education reporting.Keri comes to the Triad from West Virginia Public Broadcasting, where she served as the Chief Bureau Reporter for the Northern Panhandle. She produced stories for the state's Public Television and Radio programs and was honored by the West Virginia Associated Press Broadcasters Association for her feature and enterprise reporting.She also served as an adjunct instructor at Wheeling Jesuit University and Bethany College in West Virginia. She worked with the Center for Educational Technologies in Wheeling, WV, and other NASA centers across the country to develop several stories about the use of science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) concepts in the classroom.Keri's journalism career began at WTRF-TV 7 in Wheeling. She worked in several roles at the station, including the head assignment editor. She also was a field producer and assignment manager at WPGH-TV Fox 53 in Pittsburgh.Keri is a graduate of Ohio University. When she's not in the studio or working on a story, she enjoys watching college football with her family, cooking, and traveling.Keri is always looking for another great story idea, so please share them with her. You can follow her on Twitter @kerib_news.

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