Current:Home > InvestWhat are leaking underground storage tanks and how are they being cleaned up? -MacroWatch
What are leaking underground storage tanks and how are they being cleaned up?
PredictIQ View
Date:2025-04-09 03:45:57
For more than a decade, some residents of the tiny Richmond, Rhode Island, neighborhood of Canob Park drank and bathed using tap water that had been tainted by gasoline that leaked from storage tanks buried under service stations a few hundred yards from their homes. They spent years battling oil companies, dealing with the daily misery of boiling most of their water and wondering about lasting damage to themselves and their children.
The Canob Park disaster sparked a national outcry in the 1980s to clean up and regulate the thousands of underground tanks storing petroleum, heating oil and other hazardous chemicals across the United States. It’s a program that continues today, where the tanks are a leading cause of groundwater pollution even after more than a half-million sites have been cleaned up.
___
EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a collaboration between The Associated Press and The Uproot Project.
___
Nearly half of Americans depend on groundwater for their drinking water, according to the Environmental Protection Agency, and it’s not just well water that is threatened. A city’s water supply, while treated and processed to make sure it meets federal standards, may still collect contaminants from gas leaks on its way to the tap. In some cases, this can happen when the water originates from an unregulated well — some cities get their drinking water from a mix of surface and groundwater — or through cracked pipes.
For privately owned wells, which aren’t regulated by the government, the homeowner has the responsibility to treat and filter the water.
HOW LEAKS HAPPEN
Environmental experts say even a pinprick-size hole in an underground tank can send 400 gallons of fuel a year into the ground, polluting soil and water. Spills can also destroy habitat and kill wildlife. Roughly 81 million people live within a quarter-mile of an underground storage tank that’s experienced at least one leak, based on the latest EPA data.
Most tanks were made of steel in the mid-1980s and likely to corrode over time. Modern tanks are fiberglass, which is more resistant to corrosion, but all tanks begin to leak sooner or later, said Dr. Kelly Pennell, a professor of environmental engineering and water resources at the University of Kentucky. The cylindrical tanks typically hold tens of thousands of gallons of fuel.
Detecting leaks is not easy, she said.
“If a gasoline station operated for 10 or 15 years, you may not be able to detect those small leaks,” said Dr. Pennell. “You wouldn’t be losing 1,000 gallons a day – you’re losing drips – but over time those matter.”
Leaks can form chemical plumes that move through groundwater and turn into vapor that rises up through cracks in the foundations of homes and businesses. Those fumes can contain cancer-causing chemicals including benzene, an ingredient in gasoline. And they carry a risk of fire and explosion. When contamination was found in Canob Park, the local fire chief sampled drinking water at one of the service stations and said it was “almost ignitable.”
Cleaning up groundwater pollution is costly, said Anne Rabe, environmental policy director at the New York Public Interest Research Group, a non-profit that works on environmental issues, including leaking underground storage tanks.
“You really have to do extensive testing to determine when these underground storage tanks are leaking and take immediate action or every week it spreads and spreads, and that increases the cost of remediation,” Rabe said.
More than 516,000 leaks have been cleaned up since Congress directed EPA to begin regulating underground tanks in 1984, but more than 57,000 known sites still await a full cleanup, the EPA said.
COSTS OF CLEANUP
The average cost to clean up a site is $154,000, according to the Association of State and Territorial Solid Waste Management Officials, an organization that acts as a liaison between state and territorial leaking underground storage tank programs and the EPA. But that cost can be much higher or lower depending on how much work is needed.
The owners of tanks are supposed to carry insurance and pay for cleanup, but that doesn’t always happen. A trust fund that gets money from a gas tax helps — it currently holds about $1.5 billion — but the program costs states and the federal government about $1 billion a year beyond the fund.
While leaking underground storage tanks are located in nearly every town in the U.S., those who live closest to these sites tend to be in communities that are lower income with a higher proportion of minorities, according to the EPA.
The EPA requires owners and operators of underground storage tanks to install approved leak detection equipment and to regularly test these systems. But they aren’t foolproof. There are different types of systems, and any one type can miss a leak or its magnitude. Trade associations suggest building a system that uses more than one leak detection method, but that doesn’t always happen, and sometimes the one chosen may not be the best one for a particular tank. And owners may not maintain them properly.
Complying with the regulations, the EPA estimated in 2015, would cost tank owners and operators a total of $160 million a year — or about $715 per facility per year. But it would mean less taxpayer money needed for cleanups, the agency said.
Some of the properties cleaned up since the program began got funding from federal and state brownfields programs, which encourage the cleanup and reuse of contaminated or potentially contaminated sites.
The EPA last year announced a $315 million historic investment in the brownfields program, with most of the money coming from the bipartisan infrastructure deal President Joe Biden signed into law more than two years ago.
___
The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
veryGood! (94)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- President Biden welcomes Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as some Republicans question aid
- Their husbands’ misdeeds leave Norway’s most powerful women facing the consequences
- Oklahoma executes Anthony Sanchez for killing of college dance student Juli Busken in 1996
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Sophie Turner is suing Joe Jonas for allegedly refusing to let her take their kids to the U.K.
- 'Probably haunted' funeral home listed for sale as 3-bedroom house with rooms 'gutted and waiting'
- Sophia Culpo Says She Reached Out to Alix Earle Amid Braxton Berrios Drama
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- DuckDuckGo founder says Google’s phone and manufacturing partnerships thwart competition
Ranking
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Which 2-0 NFL teams are for real? Ranking all nine by Super Bowl contender legitimacy
- U.S. offers nearly half-a-million Venezuelan migrants legal status and work permits following demands from strained cities
- Tory Lanez begins 10-year prison sentence for shooting Megan Thee Stallion
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Illinois mass murder suspect, person of interest found dead after Oklahoma police chase
- UAW strike Day 6: Stellantis sends new proposal to union
- New York pay transparency law drives change in job postings across U.S.
Recommendation
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
Prada explores lightness with translucent chiffon for summer 2024
Biden says Norfolk Southern must be held accountable for Ohio derailment but won’t declare disaster
Simone Biles makes World Championships in gymnastics for sixth time, setting a record
Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
Mississippi auditor says several college majors indoctrinate students and should be defunded
Supreme Court to decide whether Alabama can postpone drawing new congressional districts
US contractor originally from Ethiopia arrested on espionage charges, Justice Department says