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GLIN==> EPA Toxic Release Inventory Out for Year 2005
- Subject: GLIN==> EPA Toxic Release Inventory Out for Year 2005
- From: "Alex J. Sagady & Associates" <ajs@sagady.com>
- Date: Thu, 22 Mar 2007 19:02:32 -0500
- Delivered-to: glin-announce-archive@glc.org
- Delivered-to: glin-announce@great-lakes.net
- List-name: GLIN-Announce
Chemical Release Data Available - EPA Sets New Early Record for
Releasing Data to Communities Nationally
Release
date: 03/22/2007
Contact Information: Suzanne Ackerman, (202) 564-4355 /
ackerman.suzanne@epa.gov Jessica Emond, (202) 564-4355 /
emond.jessica@epa.gov
(Washington, D.C. - March 22,
2007) EPA's Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) data is available this year
earlier than ever before for local communities and national analysis.
Facility-specific data was released last September and the full national
data released today.
"EPA is getting quality data out to the public faster through
electronic reporting which is good for the environment, good for states
and good for our partners in industry," said EPA Assistant
Administrator for the Office of Environmental Information Molly O'Neill.
This year's data shows that progress is being made in reducing releases
of several chemicals of special concern. For example, between 2004 and
2005 dioxin releases decreased by 23 percent and mercury releases fell by
nine percent. In addition, several individual industries have made
significant progress in reducing releases. Petroleum refining releases
dropped 10 percent transportation equipment registered a six percent
decrease and chemical manufacturing cut releases by four percent.
Review of the last five years of data shows chemical releases reported to
TRI have decreased by 22 percent nationally. The 2005 data shows a three
percent increase overall in total disposal and other releases. Annual
changes are not unusual. A number of possible reasons for the increase
include: production increases, fluctuations in the content of raw
materials used in particular industries or changes in releases at large
facilities that impacts the national data.
Some 95 percent of the 23,000 facilities used electronic reporting which
was instrumental in making the information available to the public
quicker and more efficiently than in previous years.
TRI tracks the chemicals and industrial sectors specified by the
Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act of 1986 and its
amendments. The Pollution Prevention Act (PPA) of 1990 also mandates that
TRI reports must include data on toxic chemicals treated on-site,
recycled, and burned for energy recovery. Together, these laws require
facilities in certain industries to report annually on releases, disposal
and other waste management activities related to these
chemicals.
TRI Data for
2005:
epa.gov/tri/tridata/tri05/index.htm
More information about TRI:
epa.gov/tri/
==========================================
Alex J. Sagady & Associates
http://www.sagady.com
Environmental Enforcement, Permit/Technical Review, Public Policy,
Expert Witness Review and Litigation Investigation on Air, Water and
Waste/Community Environmental and Resource Protection
Prospectus at:
http://www.sagady.com/sagady.pdf
657 Spartan Ave, East Lansing, MI 48823
(517) 332-6971; (517) 332-8987 (fax); ajs@sagady.com
==========================================