Radioactive sewage leak triggers evacuation in Florida



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World

This aerial photo taken from a plane shows a deposit near the old Piney Point phosphate mine. Photo / AP

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency Saturday after a significant leak in a large sewage pond threatened to flood roads and burst a system that stores contaminated water.

Florida authorities ordered the evacuation of more than 300 homes and the closure of a highway near the large reservoir in the Tampa Bay area north of Bradenton.

Residents living around the Piney Point Reservoir received an alert via text message saying to leave the area immediately because the collapse was “imminent.” Authorities expanded the evacuation area later Saturday to include more homes, but said they did not plan to open shelters.

The Florida Department of Environmental Protection says a rupture was detected on Friday in one of the walls of a 33ha pond that is 8 m deep and contains millions of gallons of water containing phosphorus and nitrogen from an old phosphate plant.

Officials brought stones and materials to plug the hole in the pond from Friday to Saturday, but the attempt was unsuccessful. Manatee County Administrator Scott Hopes said at a news conference Saturday that the most pressing concern is that water could flood the area, which he said was agricultural and sparsely populated.

“We’re talking about the potential of around 600 million gallons (2.3 billion liters) in a matter of seconds and minutes leaving that holding pool and going around the surrounding area,” Hopes said.

A new expanded emergency evacuation order was dispatched to an area around Piney Point, the former phosphate mine.  Photo / AP
A new expanded emergency evacuation order was dispatched to an area around Piney Point, the former phosphate mine. Photo / AP

Workers have been pumping thousands of gallons per minute at the site to reduce volume in case the pond bursts. Pumping the entire pond would take 10-12 days.

Others have been working to map the path to control how the water flows from the pond into Tampa Bay. DeSantis’ declaration of a state of emergency assigns more pumps and cranes to the area.

The owner, HRK Holdings, did not respond to a request for comment on Saturday.

The pond where the leak was discovered is at the old Piney Point phosphate mine, on top of a pile of phosphorous gypsum, a waste product from the manufacture of radioactive fertilizers. It contains small amounts of naturally occurring radium and uranium, and batteries can also release large concentrations of radon gas.

A significant leak in a large sewage pond threatened to flood roads and burst a system that stores polluted water.  Photo / AP
A significant leak in a large sewage pond threatened to flood roads and burst a system that stores polluted water. Photo / AP

Hopes says that if the pond collapses, there is a risk that it could destabilize the walls of other areas of the plant.

“The pond is basically salt water. Yesterday we saw ducks, there are snooks swimming there. It supports wildlife. That is not the case with the other two pools,” he said, adding that the sewage from the other ponds should be treated. to reduce the content of ammonium and other materials.

The executive order declaring a state of emergency says the broken structure holds 1.8 billion liters of seawater mixed with process water and materials from the embankment of the former fertilizer manufacturing plant.

Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried urged the governor in a letter to convene an emergency session of the state cabinet to discuss a plan, adding that this property has had similar leaks in the past.

“The immediate evacuation of residents, the disruption of families over Easter weekend, and the potential environmental catastrophe require the attention and action of Florida’s elected leaders,” Fried said.

In 2016, more than 200 million gallons of contaminated wastewater from another fertilizer plant in central Florida leaked into one of the state’s major aquifers after a huge sinkhole opened in a pond from a phosphogypsum heap.

There are at least 70 gypsum piles in the US and about 27 in Florida, mostly in the west-central region of Florida. The wastewater stored in the gypsum piles cannot be seen from the ground, as the piles surrounding the structure can reach 150 m.

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