JUNE 25, 2015
Environmental groups and Gulf Power Corp. have reached a settlement in a legal fight about allegations that harmful pollutants leaked into Northwest Florida’s Apalachicola River from the site of a coal-fired power plant.
Environmental groups and Gulf Power Corp. have reached a settlement in a legal fight about allegations that harmful pollutants leaked into Northwest Florida’s Apalachicola River from the site of a coal-fired power plant.
The groups Apalachicola Riverkeeper, the Southern Alliance
for Clean Energy and Waterkeeper Alliance last year filed the lawsuit,
which focused on Gulf’s Herbert Scholz Generating Plant, which is on the
west bank of the Apalachicola River near the town of Sneads in Jackson
County.
Gulf Power’s groundwater monitoring has been in place
since the mid-80s and Plant Scholz has always been in compliance, says
Jeff Rogers, Gulf Power spokesman.
After receiving the letter of intent from Earthjustice to
file a lawsuit for alleged Clean Water Act violations at Plant Scholz,
Gulf Power and FDEP conducted follow-up site inspections and sampling.
All test results were determined to be within compliance, Rogers said.
In essence, the settlement allows Gulf Power to move ahead
with the planning and engineering necessary for permanent closure of
the ash ponds at Plant Scholz consistent with the plant’s retirement
earlier this year, Rogers says.
The closure plan will be submitted the Florida Department
of Environmental Protection as part of the department’s normal
permitting process.
Gulf Power and Earthjustice have entered into a settlement agreement that resolves all aspects of the lawsuit.
“While this was an unnecessary lawsuit, it in no way
impacts the closure of Plant Scholz or the closure of the ponds, which
were a natural result of the plant’s retirement,” Rogers says.
The lawsuit alleged that harmful pollutants leaked into
the river from impoundments that hold coal ash, which is a byproduct of
burning coal to generate electricity.
The settlement was filed Wednesday in federal court in Tallahassee.
Bradley Marshall, an attorney for the legal group
Earthjustice, said in a statement: “Coal ash waste is a huge pollution
problem that threatens waterways and drinking water supplies all over
the country,” Marshall said in the statement.