• It's not just toxic chemicals. Radioactive waste was also dumped off Lo

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Tue Aug 13 08:56:24 2024
    XPost: alt.los-angeles, talk.environment, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics

    For decades, a graveyard of corroding barrels has littered the seafloor
    just off the coast of Los Angeles. It was out of sight, out of mind — a not-so-secret secret that haunted the marine environment until a team of researchers came across them with an advanced underwater camera.

    Speculation abounded as to what these mysterious barrels might contain. Startling amounts of DDT near the barrels pointed to a little-known
    history of toxic pollution from what was once the largest DDT manufacturer
    in the nation, but federal regulators recently determined that the
    manufacturer had not bothered with barrels. (Its acid waste was poured
    straight into the ocean instead.)

    Now, as part of an unprecedented reckoning with the legacy of ocean
    dumping in Southern California, scientists have concluded the barrels may actually contain low-level radioactive waste. Records show that from the
    1940s through the 1960s, it was not uncommon for local hospitals, labs and other industrial operations to dispose barrels of tritium, carbon-14 and
    other similar waste at sea.

    “This is a classic situation of bad versus worse. It’s bad we have
    potential low-level radioactive waste just sitting there on the seafloor.
    It’s worse that we have DDT compounds spread across a wide area of the
    seafloor at concerning concentrations,” said David Valentine, whose
    research team at UC Santa Barbara had first discovered the barrels and
    sparked concerns of what could be inside. “The question we grapple with
    now is how bad and how much worse.”

    This latest revelation from Valentine’s team was published Wednesday in Environmental Science & Technology as part of a broader, highly
    anticipated study that lays the groundwork for understanding just how much
    DDT is spread across the seafloor — and how the contamination might still
    be moving 3,000 feet underwater.

    Public concerns have intensified since The Times reported in 2020 that dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, banned in 1972 following Rachel Carson’s “Silent Spring,” is still haunting the marine environment in insidious
    ways. Scientists continue to trace significant amounts of this decades-old “forever chemical” all the way up the marine food chain, and a recent
    study linked the presence of this once-popular pesticide to an aggressive cancer in California sea lions.

    Dozens of ecotoxicologists and marine scientists are now trying to fill
    key data gaps, and the findings so far have been one plot twist after
    another. A research team led by UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography just recently set sail to help map and identify as many
    barrels as possible on the seafloor — only to discover a multitude of
    discarded military explosives from the World War II era.

    And in the process of digging up old records, the U.S. Environmental
    Protection Agency discovered that from the 1930s to the early 1970s, 13
    other areas off the Southern California coast had also been approved for dumping of military explosives, radioactive waste and various refinery byproducts — including 3 million metric tons of petroleum waste.

    Here’s what we know about the legacy of DDT dumping off L.A.’s coast
    DDT was banned 50 years ago, but its toxic legacy continues to affect the California marine ecosystem and threaten various animal species.

    May 6, 2024

    In the study published this week, Valentine found high concentrations of
    DDT spread across a wide swath of seafloor larger than the city of San Francisco. His team has been collecting hundreds of sediment samples as
    part of a methodical, large-scale effort to map the footprint of the
    dumping and analyze how the chemical might be moving through the water and whether it has broken down. After many trips out to sea, they still have
    yet to find the boundary of the dump site, but concluded that much of the
    DDT in the deep ocean remains in its most potent form.

    Further analysis, using carbon-dating methods, determined that the DDT
    dumping peaked in the 1950s, when Montrose Chemical Corp. of California
    was still operating near Torrance during the pesticide’s postwar heyday —
    and prior to the onset of formal ocean dumping regulations.

    Clues pointing to the radioactive waste emerged in the process of sorting through this DDT history.

    Jacob Schmidt, lead author of the study and a PhD candidate in Valentine’s
    lab, combed through hundreds of pages of old records and tracked down
    seven lines of evidence indicating that California Salvage, the same
    company tasked with pouring the DDT waste off the coast of Los Angeles,
    had also dumped low-level radioactive waste while out at sea.

    The company, now defunct, had received a permit in 1959 to dump
    containerized radioactive waste about 150 miles offshore, according to the
    U.S. Federal Register. Although archived notes by the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission say the permit was never activated, other records show
    California Salvage advertised its radioactive waste disposal services and received waste in the 1960s from a radioisotope facility in Burbank, as
    well as barrels of tritium and carbon-14 from a regional Veterans Administration hospital facility.

    Given recent revelations that the people in charge of getting rid of the
    DDT waste sometimes took shortcuts and just dumped it closer to port, researchers say they would not be surprised if the radioactive waste had
    also been dumped closer than 150 miles offshore.

    “There’s quite a bit of a paper trail,” Valentine said. “It’s all circumstantial, but the circumstances seem to point toward this company
    that would take whatever waste people gave them and barge it offshore …
    with the other liquid wastes that we know they were dumping at the time.”

    Ken Buesseler, a marine radiochemist who was not affiliated with the
    study, said that generally speaking, some of the more abundant radioactive isotopes that were dumped into the ocean at the time — such as tritium —
    would have largely decayed in the past 80 years. But many questions remain
    on what other potentially more hazardous isotopes could’ve been dumped.

    The sobering reality, he noted, is that it wasn’t until the 1970s that
    people started to take radioactive waste to landfills rather than dump it
    in the ocean.

    He pulled out an old map published by the International Atomic Energy
    Agency that noted from 1946 to 1970, more than 56,000 barrels of
    radioactive waste had been dumped into the Pacific Ocean on the U.S. side.
    And across the world even today, low-level radioactive waste is still
    being released into the ocean by nuclear power plants and decommissioned
    plants such as the one in Fukushima, Japan.

    https://ca- times.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/7af862a/2147483647/strip/true/crop/7 01x701+0+0/resize/1440x1440!/format/webp/quality/75/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcal ifornia-times- brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fb6%2F30%2F103218d242d9b1d7381499ef3a7d%2Fscr eenshot-of-iaea-radioactive-dumping-map.JPG

    In a 1999 report by the International Atomic Energy Agency titled
    “Inventory of radioactive waste disposals at sea,” a grainy map shows that
    at least 56,261 containers of radioactive waste were dumped into the
    Pacific Ocean from 1946 to 1970. (International Atomic Energy Agency)
    “The problem with the oceans as a dumping solution is once it’s there, you can’t go back and get it,” said Buesseler, a senior scientist at Woods
    Hole Oceanographic Institution and director of the Center for Marine and Environmental Radioactivity. “These 56,000 barrels, for example, we’re
    never going to get them back.”

    Mark Gold, an environmental scientist at the Natural Resources Defense
    Council who has worked on the toxic legacy of DDT for more than 30 years,
    said it is unsettling to think just how big the consequences of ocean
    dumping might be across the country and the world. Scientists have
    discovered DDT, military explosives and now radioactive waste off the Los Angeles coast because they knew to look. But what about all the other dump sites where no one’s looking?

    “The more we look, the more we find, and every new bit of information
    seems to be scarier than the last,” said Gold, who called on federal
    officials to act more boldly on this information. “This has shown just how egregious and harmful the dumping has been off our nation’s coasts, and
    that we have no idea how big of an issue and how big of a problem this is nationally.”

    U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) and Rep. Salud Carbajal (D-Santa
    Barbara), in a letter signed this week by 22 fellow members of Congress,
    urged the Biden administration to commit dedicated long-term funding to
    both studying and remediating the issue. (Congress has so far allocated
    more than $11 million in one-time funding that led to many of these
    initial scientific findings, and an additional $5.2 million in state
    funding recently kicked off 18 more months of research.)

    “While DDT was banned more than 50 years ago, we still have only a murky picture of its potential impacts to human health, national security and
    ocean ecosystems,” the lawmakers said. “We encourage the administration to think about the next 50 years, creating a long-term national plan within
    EPA and [the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration] to address
    this toxic legacy off the coast of our communities.”

    As for the EPA, regulators urged the growing research effort to stay
    focused on the agency’s most burning questions: Is this legacy
    contamination still moving through the ocean in a way that threatens the
    marine environment or human health? And if so, is there a potential path
    for remediation?

    EPA scientists have also been refining their own sampling plan, in collaboration with a number of government agencies, to get a grasp of the
    many other chemicals that had been dumped into the ocean. The hope, they
    said, is that all these research efforts combined will ultimately inform
    how future investigations of other offshore dump sites — whether along the Southern California coast or elsewhere in the country — could be
    conducted.

    “It’s extremely overwhelming. … There’s still so much we don’t know,” said
    John Chesnutt, a Superfund section manager who has been leading the EPA’s technical team on the ocean dumping investigation. “Whether it’s
    radioactivity or explosives or what have you, there’s potentially a wide
    range of contaminants out there that aren’t good for the environment and
    the food web, if they’re really moving through it.”

    https://www.latimes.com/environment/story/2024-02-21/radioactive-waste- ocean-dumping-los-angeles-coast

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