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There used to be hundreds of smelters in the U.S. that recycled the lead in old car batteries.
Now, there are fewer than a dozen of these secondary smelters because public health agencies say there is no safe level of exposure to lead contamination. That has made these smelters controversial.
One of the few remaining is Quemetco, located in a suburb east of Los Angeles. Its not only still operating, it even has plans to expand. When residents near the Quemetco facility get sick, they sometimes blame the lead smelter.
My mother, she did get cancer, a rare cancer. I cant say its from that place, but she did end up passing away from it, said Nick Buchheit, who lives in his childhood home less than a mile from the plant.
The smoke from the smelter is visible from Buchheits backyard. Three of his cats developed tumors and died.
Its impossible to say whether Quemetcos operations made them sick. But the facility is legally required, every year, to mail a pamphlet reminding Buchheit of his increased cancer risk living nearby.
He said cant afford to move away. I have my nieces and nephews, my own daughter, and they gotta deal with that stuff too.
Quemetco declined to provide an interview, but the companys website says it has not found significant risks to living near its smelter. The site says its safety and health protection records lead the industry.
The company also points out that as U.S. smelters continue to shut down, spent battery exports continue to increase and most of the waste goes to countries with less rigorous environmental standards.
Californias Department of Toxic Substances Control gave the company several years to comply with emissions standards.
Quemetcos unresponsiveness was a significant contributing factor to the length of time it took to resolve these issues, said the agencys director, Meredith Williams.
Quemetcos own report showed that a third of nearby homes had illegally high levels of lead in soil. The state reached a settlement over its 27 emissions violations, allowing Quemetco to operate while it fixes the last of them.
Dozens of lead smelters have required federal cleanup efforts. But there is still demand to process this waste in the U.S., which is why Quemetco plans to expand by 25%.
Earthjustice Attorney Angela Johnson Meszaros represents clients living near the smelter. She said the smelter is too close to populated communities, and her clients hope it will either shut down or move to an area with fewer people.
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Explore more:If there was ever a time when it was appropriate to have a secondary lead smelter in Los Angeles County, she said, that time has long since passed.
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We've the news today that the last remaining primary lead smelter in the US is to close. Probably a good idea and the reason it's closing is simply because we don't need it any more. In this sense the hippies have won and a good thing too.
St. Louis-based Doe Run Co., the worlds third-largest producer of lead from mines, said it will stop smelting operations as part of a $65 million agreement with the U.S Environmental Protection Agency and the state of Missouri. The company has operated the facility since .
Doe Run said the estimated $100 million cost to build a new facility and meet air-quality standards was too risky.
We saw no alternative to closing our plant, Gary Hughes, general manager of Doe Runs Metals Division, said in a Dec. 14 statement.
The smelters announced closing provoked a furor on some conservative Web publications. Newsmax.com reported Dec. 11 that EPA Rules Force Closure of Last Ammo Maker. Thetrumpet.com lamented on Nov. 14 that the U.S. may become dependent on foreign nations for its small-arms ammunition supply chain.
Only 3% of lead smelted goes into ammo so that's not really an issue. And we might think that the hippies have won by closing down such a polluting plant but that's not it either really. If we really needed that lead then the plant would have stayed open because the installation of that pollution control equipment would have been worth it.
No, what's really happening is that we've all taken on board the lesson from Blueprint for Survival, that book from the s that really launched the modern environmental movement. The main insistence in that book about metals and minerals was that we had to move from a "flow" economy to a "stock" one. That is, instead of digging up new minerals and them throwing whatever it was away, we should recycle the minerals and metals that we are using. And that's exactly what we have done over those decades:
Recycling:
In , about 1.14 million tons of secondary lead was produced, an amount equivalent to 80% of reported domestic lead consumption. Nearly all of it was recovered from old (post-consumer) scrap.
We just don't need to be producing that much virgin lead from ore because we get the vast majority of what we use from recycling the old things we'd already made of lead: mostly car and truck batteries.
It's in this sense that I mean the hippies have won. We are, pretty much, with respect to lead at least, in a stock economy, not a flow one.
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