Subject:
News Journal 1/3/2008 - Power plant's cooling system said to destroy millions
of fish each year
Indian
River center of fish debate
Power
plant's cooling system said
to destroy millions of fish each year
By JEFF MONTGOMERY, The News Journal
Posted Thursday,
January 3, 2008
NRG's Indian River power plant is likely to be the next battleground in a
regional war over fishery losses to industrial and power plant cooling water
intakes, state regulators and environmental groups predicted Wednesday.
Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control officials said several
groups or individuals have asked for a public hearing on Indian River's draft
wastewater discharge permit.
"There's significant interest in it, so we will have a hearing," said
Peder Hansen, who directs DNREC's surface water discharges section. He estimated
that a hearing could take place as early as next month.
Much of the attention has focused on the power plant's cooling water intakes,
which destroy millions of fish, crabs and larvae each year.
NRG draws as much as 350 million gallons of water daily from the nearby Indian
River, using it once for cooling before returning heated flows to the
environment.
Although a company-commissione
State Sen. George H. Bunting Jr., D-Bethany Beach, is among those who asked for
a hearing. "Here we've gone to a great extent in Delaware to come up with a
fishing license so we know how many fish are taken in our waters, and those
intakes alone kill more fish than all the fishermen I know in my district will
ever catch," Bunting said.
Several industries along the Delaware River employ similar and in some cases far
larger "once-through" cooling systems, including Conectiv's Edge Moor
power plant in Wilmington, the Delaware City Refinery and the Salem/Hope Creek
nuclear complex.
The once-through process has come under increased attack by environmental groups
after a federal court ruled last year that utilities must use "best
available" technologies to protect fish.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency studies estimate that the Salem/Hope Creek
nuclear plant destroys the equivalent of 347 million year-old fish annually. The
same report ranked the Conectiv Edge Moor power plant and Valero Delaware City
Refinery as having the second and third deadliest intakes, with about 158
million year-old equivalents for Conectiv and 73.4 million lost to the refinery.
Industries have argued that river ecosystems are not harmed by the fish losses,
while ruling out cooling towers as too costly. Salem/Hope Creek's owners have
estimated that cooling towers could cost $1 billion or more.
"The draft permit DNREC issued for NRG does not even attempt to require
compliance" with Clean Water Act requirements for fish protection, Maya K.
van Rossum, who directs the Delaware Riverkeeper Network, said in a recent
request for a hearing.
Van Rossum's group wants regulators to bar once-through cooling and order the
use of cooling towers that recycle the water that NRG, Conectiv, Delaware City
and Salem tap from rivers -- unless they can develop an equally effective
alternative before their next five-year wastewater discharge permit expires.
Van Rossum said that the Indian River permit is an important symbol in the
regional debate over cooling towers.
DNREC's current permit for the plant expired in 1992, with progress blocked
until recently by disputes over the effect of the plant's heated water on the
environment near its discharge. Federal and state negotiators recently developed
a compromise proposal on temperature limits for plant discharges.
DNREC's Hansen said NRG's proposals for the temperature limits require more
study. NRG had argued that it already has investigated the effects baywide and
found that the environmental effects did not justify a cooling tower. EPA
reviewers, however, have described past studies as "deficient."
Copyright ©2008, The News Journal.