Professor:
Explosion possible near St. Louis-area nuclear site — Official
Steam
increasing from underground fire, may be moving closer to radioactive
waste
29
May, 2013
Dawn
Chapman can put up with the noxious smell caused by smoldering trash
in a landfill near her suburban St. Louis home. But if the burning
creeps close to buried nuclear waste, she's ready to get out.
It's
a problem that worries many people in this densely populated area
near Lambert Airport, where the trash burns just 1,200 feet from
another landfill that holds radioactive waste dating back to the
Manhattan Project, which created the first atomic bomb in the 1940s.
"We're
talking about just walking away from our home, honestly," said
Chapman, a mother of three young special-needs children. She's not
comfortable selling the house, even if she could.
"I'm
a moral person. I can't just sell it to another family. If I feel
like it's unsafe for my children, how could I do that to somebody
else?" she asked.
Just
below the surface of the Bridgeton Landfill, a layer of trash has
been burning since at least 2010, fueled by an underground reaction
of decomposing waste. The smoldering causes a noxious odor so
overpowering that people in surrounding neighborhoods are reluctant
to come out of their homes. Republic Services, the Phoenix-based
owner of Bridgeton, is spending millions of dollars to ease the smell
problem.
But
the smell is just the most immediate concern. Environmentalists are
alarmed by the possibility that the fire could someday reach the
nuclear waste in the neighboring West Lake Landfill, owned by a
subsidiary of Republic Services.
"I
think what we're seeing is the possibility of a slow-moving disaster
right before our eyes," said Ed Smith of the Missouri Coalition
for the Environment.
Republic
Services officials say that risk is remote, and they have a plan
approved by state regulators, just in case.
At
its current rate of movement, the underground smoldering would take
more than 10 years to reach the edge of the West Lake landfill,
according to company spokesman Richard Callow. He said preventative
interceptor wells — underground structures that capture
below-surface gasses — are already in place.
And
if the fire did get close, Callow said, there are other options to
shield the nuclear waste, including creating a barrier made of soil
between the two landfills.
Missouri
health officials and the state's Department of Natural Resources are
monitoring the smoldering closely, Callow said, adding that the
federal Environmental Protection Agency has repeatedly stated that
the fire poses no threat to the nuclear waste.
EPA
spokesman Chris Whitley declined to comment on the risk, deferring to
the DNR.
In
a statement, DNR spokeswoman Renee Bungart did not directly address
the risk issue but said the state agency is working closely with the
company and the EPA to resolve concerns at the site.
Those
concerns have a long history.
A
St. Louis company, Mallinckrodt Chemical Co., processed uranium for
the Manhattan Project starting in the 1940s. In 1973, nuclear waste
was dumped at West Lake and mixed with other waste and soil. The EPA
designated it a Superfund site in 1990.
The
original cleanup plan called for leaving the waste on-site, covering
it with rocks, clay, fill dirt and vegetation, and installing
monitoring wells for groundwater. After an outcry from residents and
politicians, the agency agreed "to step back and take another
look at it," Whitley said. A new plan isn't likely until 2014.
As
for the fire, digging up the smoldering waste would expose it to
oxygen, which could stir up flames and make matters worse, Callow
said.
Over
the past several months, the smell grew so bad that some residents
blamed illnesses on it. DePaul Health Center posted signs in waiting
rooms on some particularly bad days explaining the odor to patients
and visitors. Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster filed suit in
March against Republic Services, alleging violations of state
environmental laws.
On
May 22, work began to remove concrete pipes at the Bridgeton Landfill
that could be allowing the smell to escape into the air. After the
pipes are removed in mid-June, Republic Services will cap the
landfill with a huge shell made of plastic and high-tech mesh.
The
cap should help the smell, but it won't end the smoldering.
At
the time of his lawsuit, Koster said, the smoldering did not appear
to be moving toward the nuclear waste. But six weeks later, Assistant
Attorney General Joe Bindbeutel said new evidence, including
increasing amounts of steam in the "neck" area between the
two sites, showed some potential movement in that direction.
Smith
also cited temperature monitoring that showed rising levels of heat
closer to the nuclear waste.
If
the nuclear waste caught fire, experts say it would not cause any
sort of meltdown, but it could pose a health risk for nearby
residents.
Heat
from any fire at the nuclear site could spark an explosion in methane
pockets or buried gas cylinders, throwing radioactive particles into
the air, said Bob Criss, professor of earth and planetary science at
Washington University in St. Louis, who has studied environmental
concerns at the landfill.
The
fire could also create "subsurface voids" that might expose
nuclear waste to wind and rain — especially problematic because the
landfill sits in the Missouri River flood plain, Criss said.
Elevated
levels of radiation have been detected in some groundwater sampling
at West Lake. But radiation in groundwater poses no health risk
"unless a person is actually drinking the groundwater,"
Whitley said.
Radium,
a highly radioactive element, often occurs naturally in groundwater
throughout the Midwest, he added.
The
EPA on Wednesday released a report showing that the nuclear waste has
not spread beyond its current landfill, according to information from
a flyover of the site using a plane capable of detecting gamma
radiation emissions. That aerial survey sought to identify areas of
underground burning, but those scans were inconclusive, Whitley said.
Remote
or not, the possibility of nuclear contamination so close to her
backyard keeps Chapman up at night. The stay-at-home mom administers
a Facebook page on the landfill problems. She hears from many
residents near the landfill who don't believe the claims that things
are under control.
"The
bottom line is it's very serious," Chapman said. "What's
happening up here is not something that has ever been encountered
before. They've had landfill fires and nuclear waste, but never in
such close proximity."
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