The inspector general of the Tennessee Valley Authority is faulting the utility’s management culture and coal ash control procedures for the disastrous 2008 coal ash spill in the Emory River in East Tennessee, The Wall Street Journal reports.
Inspector General Richard Moore’s report said TVA, the nation’s largest public utility, needs to change the way employees view environmental regulations.
“The culture surrounding the management of coal ash at TVA reflected a culture that coal ash was unimportant and relegated to the status of garbage at a landfill,” the report said. “There was very little recognition of the potential hazard to the public and the environment.” The spill dumped arsenic- and mercury-laden sludge over 5.4 million cubic yards.
While they said that the report will help them identify faulty operating procedures, TVA officials objected to the characterization of the Emory River spill as “one of the largest environmental disasters in U.S. history,” a claim that they said was “not supportable.”
Moore and TVA officials also differed on the dangers presented by the spill. The TVA had published reports claiming that the coal ash was not toxic, but Moore noted in his report that “this is disputed.”
Tennessee’s Department of Environment and Conservation handed out penalties of $11.5 million to TVA as a result of the spill.
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