. Earth Science News .
FROTH AND BUBBLE
Industrial Pollution Data Reveals Significant Reporting Gaps

File image.
by Staff Writers
Montreal, Canada (SPX) Jul 19, 2010
Taking Stock Online, released by the Commission for Environmental Cooperation, provides the latest integrated North American data and most comprehensive picture of industrial pollution across North America, documenting reported releases and transfers of 5.7 billion kilograms of toxic pollutants in 2006 from industrial facilities in Canada, Mexico and the United States.

The North American picture is incomplete however, as a combination of national reporting exemptions for certain sectors and pollutants and incomplete reporting by some facilities reveal significant gaps in the portrait of how much pollution is generated and managed by North American industry.

"Regional cooperation on environmental issues depends on comparable and complete data from Canada, Mexico and the United States," said Evan Lloyd, Executive Director of the Commission for Environmental Cooperation. "This information is critical for governments, industry and citizens to address pollution and ensure healthy communities and ecosystems."

Taking Stock Online has published the latest integrated data set from North America's pollutant release and transfer registers (PRTRs) and features an integrated, multi-year database covering over 500 toxic substances and almost 100 major industrial sectors reporting to the PRTRs of Canada, Mexico and the United States.

The site also features new tools to assist in data analysis, including a tool to explore data on pollutants transferred across national borders.

The CEC's Taking Stock Online site is updated annually and allows users to:

+ Explore information on industrial pollutant releases and transfers;

+ Generate reports in a variety of formats including pie charts and spreadsheets;

+ Create maps and view them using Google Earth;

+ Analyze PRTR data with respect to other information such as watersheds, rivers and lakes, and population centers using geospatial data from the North American Environmental Atlas.

Different reporting requirements reveal gaps

Top industrial sectors reporting releases and transfers in North America included metal mining and activities related to the oil and gas extraction sector; fossil-fuel power plants; chemicals manufacturing; and primary metals manufacturing.

Reporting requirements vary by country for some sectors and pollutants, revealing important gaps in the tracking of industrial pollution at a North American level-for example:

+ The oil and gas extraction sector is exempt from reporting under the US Toxics Release Inventory (TRI), as is hydrogen sulfide (the pollutant reported in largest proportions by this same sector in Canada). In Mexico, the reporting threshold for this pollutant is lower than in Canada and the United States, but zero hydrogen sulfide emissions were reported by the oil and gas extraction sector in 2006.

+ Some of the toxic pollutants reported in the greatest volume in Canada and the United States, such as carbon disulfide, zinc compounds, methanol, and hydrochloric acid, are exempt from the Mexican reporting system (RETC). As a result, once these pollutants are transferred across the border-for example when zinc is transferred from the United States to Mexico for disposal or recycling-they cannot be tracked.

+ Data for the public wastewater treatment sector offer a clear example of inconsistencies among national reporting requirements, and under-reporting: this sector accounted for 84% of all reported Canadian discharges to water in 2006; in the United States, the public wastewater treatment sector is exempt from TRI reporting; and in Mexico, although facilities discharging to national water bodies are required to report to RETC, very few wastewater treatment plants did so in 2006.

Progress is being made by governments to close these gaps-such as removing exemptions for sectors and adding substances subject to PRTR reporting. For example, Canada's National Pollutant Release Inventory removed the exemption for disposal of mining tailings and waste rock, which should result in an increase in reporting by Canadian mines next year.

Considering the data reported in 2006 by US metal mines, this step is potentially significant for better understanding industries' releases and handling of pollutants of particular concern.

Metal mines in the states of Alaska, Nevada, Utah and Arizona, for example, reported releases to land-often in waste piles or uncovered areas-of millions of kilograms of heavy metals including lead and mercury compounds, both of which are persistent, bioaccumulative and toxic pollutants.

Today's release of online PRTR data and analytical tools will be complemented with further analyses and information in the CEC's Taking Stock report to be released later this year. It will feature a special analysis of North American industrial pollutant releases to water, with a more detailed look at the sources and amounts as well as their potential impacts on the environment.

Last year's Taking Stock report provided an in-depth look at pollutant reporting from North American's petroleum industry.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Commission for Environmental Cooperation
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


FROTH AND BUBBLE
Hope peeks out over oil-weary Gulf Coast
New Orleans (AFP) July 18, 2010
Three sport fishermen guided their boat up a oil-stained Louisiana coastline in a hopeful if tentative show of optimism, just days after BP finally capped the broken well in the Gulf of Mexico. The trio expressed a commonly heard, guarded optimism that after three months after the start of the Gulf oil spill, the worst environmental disaster in US history might finally be in check. "(The ... read more







FROTH AND BUBBLE
Voodoo rite draws Haitian faithful praying for comfort

27 missing after bus plunges off road in southwest China

The Life-Saving Capabilities Of Storm Shelters

World Bank-managed Haiti aid fund only 20 percent full

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Amazon says Kindle sales leapfrog hardback sales

Spanish channel announces 'world's first 3-D TV series'

One Tiny Satellite In Space, Whiz Kids Plan Two More

iPad and other gadgets drain Asia of electronic components

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Turkey, Turkish Cypriots sign water pipeline deal

Indian Ocean Sea-Level Rise Threatens Coastal Areas

Ancient species discovered in Barrier Reef depths

Sucking The Ocean Through A Straw

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Himalayan ice shrivels in global warming: exhibit

Footloose Glaciers Crack Up

Arctic Climate May Be More Sensitive To Warming Than Thought

US scientist in race to learn from Indonesia's dying glacier

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Hospitals urge antiobiotic-free meat

Thailand to unleash swarm of wasps on crop pest

AgBank shares to start trading in Hong Kong

China seizes eight tonnes of endangered pangolins

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Singapore to step up anti-flood measures after deluge

Flash floods stain Singapore's reputation as urban paradise

146 dead in China rainstorms and floods: state media

At least 67 dead as Typhoon Conson calms in China

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Kenya goes hi-tech to curb election fraud

Northrop Grumman Wins African Training Contract

G. Bissau president warns army top brass, drug traffickers

Religious intolerance threatens Nigerian democracy: Jonathan

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Scientists study brain's 'body map'

The Battle For News Supremacy

Malaysia's 'forgotten' tribes left behind by development

Baby Brain Growth Mirrors Changes From Apes To Humans


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement