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After
analyzing an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) report, the environmental
coalition, Clear the Air, found more than half the fish living in
lakes and reservoirs have excessive levels of mercury. So much so,
these fish aren't safe for children and child-bearing women to eat.
The EPA report studied 268 chemicals from some 2,500 fish living
in 500 lakes and reservoirs around the United States. Environmental
groups like Clear the Air analyzed the EPA report to highlight more
information about contamination, states suffering from high levels
of contamination and the companies responsible for the problem.
Clear the Air is pressing the EPA to set tougher mercury emissions
standards for coal-fired power plants than the current federal administration
wants. Although new standards for power plants are to be finalized
next spring, the EPA isn't expected to complete their final survey
until 2006.
Among the EPA findings:
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Texas power plants produce the most mercury emissions annually.
Five of the 10 leading power plants with the highest mercury
emissions are located in the Lone Star State
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More than three-quarters of the samples surpassed the safe
limit for children under 3 eating fish twice a week and more
than half the women of an average weight who eat a similar amount
Even with the controls, Clear the Air claims they aren't nearly
enough.
EPA defended its findings, believing mercury to be a serious public
health issue and that's why they are working with the FDA to provide
warnings to consumers about fish consumption and mercury. Earlier
this year, both agencies issued a joint warning that advised women
in their child-bearing years and children not to eat shark, swordfish
and king mackerel, fish known to have high levels of mercury.
Industry groups defended EPA's stance against the environmental
coalition's findings, arguing coal-fired power plants make up less
than 1 percent of worldwide mercury emissions.
Although an independent analyst from another environmental organization
agreed with that number, coal-fired power plants account for 41
percent of all mercury emissions (some 90,000 pounds of mercury)
and 80 percent in some regions including the Great Lakes and Northeast.
New
York Times August 4, 2004
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