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[NYTr] Katrina environmental issues "almost unimaginable"

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Sep 7, 2005, 4:08:33 PM9/7/05
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Reuters - Sep 6, 2005
http://today.reuters.com/news/newsarticle.aspx?type=topNews&summit=&storyid=2005-09-06T191843Z_01_EIC669441_RTRIDST_0_NEWS-ENVIRONMENT-DC.XML

Katrina environmental issues "almost unimaginable"

By Jim Loney

BATON ROUGE, Louisiana (Reuters) - Hurricane Katrina left behind a landscape
of oil spills, leaking gas lines, damaged sewage plants and tainted water,
Louisiana's top environment official said on Tuesday.

In the state's first major assessment of the environmental havoc in southern
Louisiana, Department of Environmental Quality Secretary Mike McDaniel said
large quantities of hazardous materials in damaged industrial plants, the
danger of explosions and fires and water pollution were his main concerns
eight days after the storm struck.

Preliminary figures indicate 140,000 to 160,000 homes were flooded and will
not be recovered, he said. "Literally, they are unsalvageable," he said.

He said it would take "years" to restore water service to the entire city.

"It's almost unimaginable, the things we are going to have to deal with," he
said.

Crews have found two major oil spills, one of 68,000 barrels at a Bass
Enterprise storage depot in Venice and another of 10,000 barrels at a Murphy
Oil facility in Chalmette, McDaniel said.

But huge amounts of oil also oozed from cars, trucks and boats caught in the
flood.

"Everywhere we look there's a spill. It all adds up," he said. "There's
almost a solid sheen over the area right now."

High-level radiation sources, including nuclear plants, have been secured,
and authorities were trying to determine the status of rail cars in the area
as well as searching out large caches of hazardous materials in industrial
plants.

Although there is a disease risk from contaminated water in the streets of
New Orleans, McDaniel said it was too early to call the stagnant liquid a
"toxic soup." State and federal agencies had begun quality testing.

"I'm saying that's a little bit exaggerated," he said. "To say it's toxic,
it sounds like instant death walking in it. Let's get some better data."

Independent experts have said the New Orleans flood water, may cause
environmental damage as it flows from the city to Lake Pontchartrain and the
Mississippi River.

More than 500 Louisiana sewage plants were damaged or destroyed, including
25 major ones. There were about 170 sources of leaking hydrocarbons and
natural gas, officials said.

Katrina damaged large areas of wildlife habitat but it was too soon to
assess the long-term impact, McDaniel said.

"One thing about nature, it's resilient," he said. "Nature will recover."

) Reuters 2005.


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