GREENPEACE EVIDENCE: MARSDEN B SHOULD BE REJECTED

Environmental Panorama
Washington – Australia
July of 2005

 

26/07/2005 - Whangarei: Mighty River Power’s proposal to convert Marsden B to a coal-fired power station would not be permitted in other countries such as the US, Japan, Germany and Sweden, a Greenpeace expert witness informed the Northland Regional Council’s hearing on the proposal today.

Greenpeace tabled evidence from a world-renowned environmental scientist with over 35 years of experience in environmental assessment of power plants and other facilities, Dr Phyllis Fox. Dr Fox’s curriculum vitae stretches to 27 pages of work on coal fired power plants and work on emissions. She is listed in a number of international “Who’s Who” publications.

The Marsden evidence ignores many of the problems we have been struggling for decades to solve retrospectively,” she said, and described a number of techniques that could have been, but have not, been adopted.

Dr Fox described clouds of sulphuric acid, which impact residents around coal-fired power plants, causing burning eyes, headaches and sore throats, even when plants are equipped with scrubbers, and told of one case in which an entire town in Ohio was purchased by the operator following health problems from such sulphuric acid emissions to avoid litigation.

Giving evidence for Greenpeace today was Dr Greg Miller, an environmental scientist from Queensland, Australia, who has practised environmental chemistry for 32 years. He said that the cost of coal includes the release of greenhouse gas - 2 million tonnes of carbon dioxide every year, and the social and environmental costs on a regional and local scale.

Dr Miller evaluated the true economic cost of coal power, and said “If basic environmental and health-related costs are included in the cost of electricity generation, then a clean technology such as wind energy, would become more economically viable.”

“This project had a low degree of sustainability in terms of natural and physical resources and waste production, contaminant discharges to air, water and land, and availability of renewable energy resources in New Zealand,” he concluded.

Another senior environmental consultant from Queensland, Shelley Anderson, said that variations in the assumptions used by Mighty River Power in predicting sulphur dioxide concentrations could produce ground level concentrations of sulphur dioxide that exceed national standards.

Shelley Anderson told the hearing that “carbon dioxide emissions could cause acidification of the oceans which could affect marine lifeh. Mercury and arsenic emissions from Marsden B could concentrate in fish and shellfish affecting human health.”

Duncan Currie, legal counsel to Greenpeace, said “Many adverse environmental effects, particularly of the discharges to air, water, and the effects of the carbon dioxide emissions on climate change, meant that the proposal did not promote the sustainable management of natural and physical resources under the Resource Managment Act, so the consents should not be granted.”

“The application should be rejected as air pollution would likely breach Air Quality Guidelines, it would allow mercury into the food chain and the water pollution would significantly impact marine life,” concluded Mr Currie.

“No company that is serious about long term sustainability in environmental, economic or social terms could even consider proposing a coal-fired power station in this age of climate change and increased awareness about the effects of chemicals such as mercury and dioxin on the environment,” said Greenpeace climate campaigner, Vanessa Atkinson.

Greenpeace also reacted to National’s proposed changes to the Resource Management Act. Brash’s proposal would mean people not directed affected by a project would be unable to have a say.

“Marsden B is of national significance and will have global impacts through climate change, but if Mr Brash were to be elected, nobody outside Northland, and even no environmental groups, would be allowed to make any submissions on the project,” said Atkinson.

“Further if National removed the environmental legal fund, even people directly affected by mercury, dioxins, sulphur dioxides and other pollutants from Marsden B for the next 35 or more years, would have to fight Mighty River and its huge legal and evidential team completely on their own,” said Atkinson.

 
 

Source: Greenpeace International (http://www.greenpeace.org)
Press consultantship (Suzette Jackson)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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