Bill proposed to regulate coal ash

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1 of 3. A combination image created by Thematic Mapper on NASA’s Landsat 5 satellite images, released on January 5, 2009, shows Tennessee’s Kingston Fossil Plant and its surroundings on November 20, 2008, (L) a month before the spill, and December 22, 2008, immediately after the spill. In these false-color images, water appears blue, and sediment-laden water appears light blue. Vegetation appears green, and bare ground and urbanized areas appear pinkish-brown. In the early morning hours of December 22, 2008, the earthen wall of a containment pond at the Kingston Fossil Plant gave way. The breach released 1.3 million cubic meters (1.7 million cubic yards) of fly ash - a coal-combustion waste product captured and stored in wet form. Some of the sludge traveled north through a valley, and some flowed to the east, where it damaged dozens of homes. The spill infiltrated the Emory River, buried some 120 hectares (300 acres) in sludge, and even knocked a nearby home completely off its foundation.

Credit: Reuters/NASA/Handout

WASHINGTON | Wed Jan 14, 2009 4:01pm EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - On the heels of a major U.S. coal ash spill, a lawmaker has introduced legislation on Wednesday that would regulate the disposal of some wastes from coal-fired power plants.

The legislation, proposed by House of Representatives Natural Resources Committee Chairman Nick Rahall, would set federal standards for the design, construction and upkeep of coal ash impoundments.

Rahall's bill follows the collapse of an earthen dike at the Tennessee Valley Authority's Kingston coal-fired power plant in December, spilling coal ash across as much as 400 acres.

The ash, left from decades of coal burning, had been stored in a sludge pond. The spill extended into a waterway, blocked a road, and ruined three homes, according to the TVA.

A second, smaller coal ash spill occurred earlier this month at TVA's Widows Creek power plant in northeast Alabama.

"It is impossible to write off the disaster in Tennessee as a freak accident," Rahall said in a statement.

"The absence of national standards for coal ash has resulted in environmental damage and threats to human health throughout the country - not just last month, or last year, but for decades, and as far as we know this may be just the tip of the iceberg," he added.

The measure includes regulations that would require applications for coal ash impoundments to conduct an investigation to determine the design specifications necessary for stability.

Design plans would also have to be reviewed by a geologist or an engineer and regular inspections by qualified engineers of these structures.

(Reporting by Ayesha Rascoe; Editing by Christian Wiessner)

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