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Brownfield Sites And Environmental Law Objectives: Define brownfields and explain how they form and what laws are in place to clean them up.

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Presentation on theme: "Brownfield Sites And Environmental Law Objectives: Define brownfields and explain how they form and what laws are in place to clean them up."— Presentation transcript:

1 Brownfield Sites And Environmental Law Objectives: Define brownfields and explain how they form and what laws are in place to clean them up.

2 Humans are poisoning the Earth! Major accidents Improper disposal of waste Careless, or ignorant use of resources While trying to fix one problem- creating one that is even worse Can you identify how?– Think of examples

3 Bhopal Disaster – Union Carbide 1983 Killed 8000 people Tens of thousands injured 2013 Toxic chemicals still contaminate groundwater Pesticide plant producing toxic gases

4 Agent Orange/ Dioxin in Vietnam US military used it to defoliate trees- sprayed by the millions of gallons 400,000 were killed or injured 500,000 children born with birth defects Vietnamese and our US soldiers still suffer side effects

5 Exxon Valdez This was an oil tanker that ran aground in Alaska spilling hundreds of thousands of barrels of crude oil 11 Million Gallons!

6 Deepwater Horizon (BP) Oil Spill The oil “spill” in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010 that spewed oil for 87 days. It was the largest marine oil spill in the history of the petroleum industry 210 Million Gallons!

7 Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant – Soviet Union April 26, 1986 From 1986 to 2000: 350,400 people were evacuated and resettled from the most severely contaminated areas After the meltdown, 237 people suffered from acute radiation sickness. 31 died in the next few months.

8 Environmental Impact of the Industrial Revolution http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=obrsE8j5l6c (3.5 min)

9 What is a Brownfield? Piece of land that was once used for industrial purposes and is now typically abandoned because of suspected contamination

10 Valley of the Drums - Kentucky 23 acre collection site for toxic waste in the 1960s. Some caught fire and burned for more than a week! No laws to address the storage or containment of toxic wastes. Unregulated for another decade.

11 What is a contaminant? A contaminant is a toxic chemical that can harm humans and/or the environment.  Contaminants can pollute water, air, and/or soil. Mercury Benzene Arsenic

12 Contaminants of Major Concern Pesticides Lead and copper Benzene Asbestos Mercury and arsenic PCBs Gasoline and oil Respiratory problems Cancer and birth defects Neurotoxin Physical and mental disorders

13 Where do contaminants come from? ContaminantsPossible source of contamination Heavy metals: arsenic, cadmium chromium, lead, mercury metal finishing/plating shops, manufacturing and foundries, coal burning power plants Gasoline/constituents of gasoline: gasoline, benzene, ethylbenzene, toluene, xylene gasoline stations, tank farms, pipelines Petroleum ProductsLeaking undergound storage tanks Solvents: tetrachloroethlyene, trichloroethylene, III-trichloroethane dry cleaners, machine shops, metal finishing/plating shops

14 Why do we keep using technologies and chemicals that harm our environment? Economic Incentivesvs. Health and Environmental Impacts Coal MiningNatural Gas Fracking Deep Oil Drilling

15 Fracking – what is it? http://www.dangersoffracking.com

16 Does this site look familiar?

17 CosCob Power Plant – A Brownfield Site here in Greenwich

18 Sometimes we don’t always know that a site is dangerous until people start getting sick When we don’t know… Major sign of contaminated area: Start seeing higher than average rates of illnesses - Cancer- Rashes and skin sores - Asthma and lung illnesses- Bone diseases - Birth defects

19 Love Canal 1950’s-1970’s – many suspicious illnesses in this NY neighborhood – *A woman developed a debilitating weakness and had to give up working *a child was born with multiple birth defects *kids with strange rashes and allergies *Trees and shrubs dying *Noxious chemical smells over the neighborhood. What’s going on???

20 Love Canal 1942-1953: 22,000 tons of chemical waste dumped by Hooker Corporation 1955: Site filled, land sold for $1, elementary school built on site. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PKUyOLXtUsQ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MXSE9kcBQCI 1979 – law suits filed. Schools were shut down. Government programs bought condemned homes and tore them down. Hundreds of families evacuated. Clean up costs have been estimated at $250 million. Part 1 – six min Part 2 – six min

21 History repeats itself… this time in Woburn, MA – A Civil Action High rates of leukemia in the area around the wells. Trichloroethylene contamination of the town's water supply by three different chemical companies.

22 Have no fear… Can we fix it? Yes we can!! Superfund is the common name for the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA), a United States federal law designed to clean up sites contaminated with hazardous substances.

23 Remediation: Making Brownfield sites safe and usable again… Identify and measure contaminants Determine the safety risks Stop the contaminants from spreading Remove or isolate the contaminants Can we fix it? Yes we can!!

24 Why Redevelop Brownfield Sites? –Discounted real estate cost –Valuable location –Reduce pressure on undeveloped land –Preserve historical or architecturally significant buildings –Eliminate health and safety hazards –Improve community

25 WE DID IT!! Charles River, Boston – Success Story In 1955 the Charles River in Boston was so polluted anyone who fell in the river had to get a tetanus shot. Clean up started in the 1960s and in July 2007 the river hosted its first official swim race in decades. Then… Now…


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