March 7, 2019

EPA: 2 Indiana Counties See High Number Of Toxic Releases

Cleanup crews work along the Lake Michigan shoreline near the BP Whiting Refinery in Whiting on March 25, 2014, to recover crude oil discharged from the refinery. - Petty Officer 3rd Class Parker Wood/U.S. Coast Guard

Cleanup crews work along the Lake Michigan shoreline near the BP Whiting Refinery in Whiting on March 25, 2014, to recover crude oil discharged from the refinery.

Petty Officer 3rd Class Parker Wood/U.S. Coast Guard

PORTAGE, Ind. (AP) — Two counties in northwestern Indiana have seen the highest number of toxic releases in more than a decade, despite a national decline, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

The Toxics Release Inventory national analysis released Tuesday found Lake County had 378 toxic releases in 2017, while Porter County had 134, The Post-Tribune reported. Those are the largest amounts of on-site releases of toxins the counties have seen since 2003.

Information was collected on chemicals released into the air, water or soil from about 21,500 facilities across the country. The 49 in Lake County released more than 26 million pounds of material, while the 28 in Porter County released about 3.8 million pounds of material.

The facilities with the highest number of releases in the two counties were BP Products in Whiting, Tradebe Treatment and Recycling in East Chicago, Arcelor Mittal in East Chicago, Arcelor Mittal in Burns Harbor and U.S. Steel Gary Works.

The report included an incident when U.S. Steel in Portage spilled hexavalent chromium , a potentially carcinogenic chemical, into Lake Michigan in April 2017.

On a national level, the analysis found that water releases have declined 70 percent since 2003, while air releases have declined 25 percent.

"This year's TRI results give proof that economic growth and an improved environment can go hand in hand," said Alexandra Dunn, the EPA's assistant administrator for chemical safety and pollution prevention, in a statement.

About 4,000 pollution prevention controls were enacted at the facilities, Dunn said.

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