For Immediate Release
No. 13-OPA002
EPA’s 2011 Toxics Release Inventory Shows
Increase in Great Lakes Basin Pollution
(Chicago-January 16,
2013) Toxic releases into
surface waters in the Great Lakes Basin increased
by 12 percent from 2010 to 2011, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency’s annual Toxics Release Inventory report published today. Nationwide,
toxic surface water discharges decreased by 3 percent.
“This is a significant increase in toxic releases to our waters – and an
indication that the Great Lakes region is lagging behind other parts of the
country,” said Susan Hedman, EPA Region 5 Administrator and Great Lakes National
Program Manager. “EPA’s Toxic Release Inventory is a valuable tool to help
target areas for improvement and we will use this new information to work with
municipalities, agricultural producers and manufacturers in the Great Lakes
Basin to improve water quality.”
Nitrates and pesticides from municipal wastewater treatment plants and
agriculture account for most of the toxic surface water discharges to the Great
Lakes Basin. Nitrates were also discharged by primary metals facilities, such as
iron and steel mills and smelters, and food and beverage manufacturers.
The Great Lakes Basin
consists of Lakes Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie and Ontario; a number of other
smaller lakes and waterways; and the surrounding watershed. The watershed covers
parts of Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania
and Wisconsin, and parts of Ontario in Canada. The Great Lakes are the largest
surface freshwater system in the world.
Despite increases from
2010 to 2011, overall toxic releases in the Great Lakes Basin have decreased
about 40 percent since 2003 and are currently at the second-lowest level in a
decade. Surface water, air and land releases in the basin increased by 12, 1 and
4 percent respectively, while underground injection decreased 5 percent from
2010 to 2011.
Nationwide, the 2011 TRI data show total toxic air releases in 2011
declined 8 percent from 2010, mostly because of decreased emissions of hazardous
air pollutants. Total releases of toxic chemicals increased for the second year
in a row as a result of mining.
EPA’s TRI program
collects information on toxic chemical releases to the air, water and land, as
well as information on waste management and pollution prevention activities by
facilities across the country. Facilities must report their toxic releases to
EPA under the Federal Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act by the
beginning of July each year.
The Pollution Prevention Act of 1990 also
requires information on waste management activities related to TRI chemicals.
Also, EPA’s TRI mobile application, myRTK, geographically displays nearby facilities that
report to the TRI program, as well as facilities with EPA air, water or
hazardous waste program permits.
More on
the 2011 TRI analysis and TRI web-based tools: http://www.epa.gov/tri/NationalAnalysis
More on
facility efforts to reduce toxic chemical releases: http://www.epa.gov/tri/p2
More on
EPA's TRI mobile application, myRTK: http://www.epa.gov/tri/myrtk/
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