This is some Chemetco level shit
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Per the article:
The sample was collected on April 7. Eurofins issued its results on April 10. According to the lab report, the 24-hour composite found:
• Hexavalent chromium at 0.0104 milligrams per liter, just above the lab’s reporting limit of 0.01 mg/L. Hexavalent chromium is classified as a known human carcinogen by the US National Toxicology Program. It is the substance the Erin Brockovich case was built around.
• Arsenic at 0.0025 mg/L. That is below the federal drinking water standard of 0.01 mg/L, but present.
• Strontium at 1.17 mg/L. Mazloum’s technical report on the findings noted that long-term exposure can affect bone density and kidney function in humans and wildlife.
• Lithium and vanadium at concentrations Lazarte’s letter described as abnormally high relative to rainwater or normal groundwater.
• Elevated levels of manganese, iron, phosphorus, calcium, magnesium and potassium consistent with industrial discharge. Manganese, a battery process tracer, can have neurological effects at chronic doses. Excess phosphorus can cause algae blooms that strip oxygen from waterways.
• Ammonia in the form of nitrogen at 1.68 mg/L, amplifying the algae bloom risk
Let's hope they didn't just make the data up. Or falsify it at the request of Musk. https://www.foodnavigator.com/Article/2018/03/14/Pennsylvania-DEP-sanctions-Eurofins-QC-for-water-testing-violations/
What an appropriate username for this article
Dang I would have overlooked that. Good catch!
So, which entry-level employee with no ability to be responsible for this will be fired, and how big will the fine they won't have to pay be?
Plug that pipe with Elon's bloated corpse
No don't kill him first.
Wouldn't it be a shame if someone accidentally crushed that pipe shut with a trackhoe.
pipe shut with a trackhoe
I ran crosscountry in high school.
Then it goes completely uncontrolled into the ground and is very hard to remove. What you want to do is to seal the pipe so the back flow happens inside the facility (assuming they didn't completely butcher the pipe installation, which.... you know... isn't safe to assume)
I'd love to be hating on a company dumping wastewater as much as the next person but looking at the lab report results and the latest available public drinking water report (2024) for Robstown, where the factory is located. Assuming they use that water as the factory source water. These articles are blowing the water quality findings out of p. Arsenic was found at a higher level in the drinking water, than what the discharge water measured, for instances. Plus hexavalent chormium was 4 tenthousands higher then the limit, I wish the lab included their equipment accuracy. And that's the 5mins I'm willing to spend on this research.
*edit added Sources Nueces County water report. https://nueceswater3.com/water-quality-report
ANALYTICAL REPORT https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/28055380-j2673-1-uds-level-2-report-final-report/
Yeah, so what's the black stuff and why is the grass dying then? I guess they just need to expand what they're testing for.
Or conduct an inspection of the plant itself and find out what they're using, and where that pipe goes.
I should be more clear. I'm not saying there is no need to investigate further. Just that some of the reported findings seem overblown in the article's I've read, in my opinion. There needs to be more information to answer your question. "Why is the grass dying?" Who knows, toxic chemical, or just water logged grass. Black looking water coming from a black pipe? Maybe it's treated water and safe, maybe it's not. Needs more information. I'm kind blown away that the lab didnt collect water at the discharge point.
Nothing in the lab report. Everything in the lab report is far to low to be 'black stuff'. So I don't know and those who do are not talking.
So far I have to go with this is nothing but haters trying to yell without concern for facts. If we get more details I may change my mind but for now this is nothing and anyone saying otherwise should be embarrassed for their lack of concern for facts.
It’s still an illegal discharge. There are multiple things listed that are not good for the local environment. Even phosphorus and ammonia can be damaging by stimulating algae blooms.
It's not though. TCEQ authorized a discharge water permit and has investigated the water discharge. Now, if people are being dishonest, that's another story, that will likley be somthing we find out some years in the future. Your not wrong about algae blooms. Though, the lab didnt sample the water straight from the discharge source but further down the ditch. And thats all farmland around there. Farms use ammonia nitrate, as fertilizer.
Neither hexavalent chromium nor arsenic appears in Tesla’s TCEQ discharge permit as an allowable pollutant. Neither was tested for during TCEQ’s February investigation.
Good point.
What it did not do, explicitly, was grant Tesla the right to use public or private property for wastewater conveyance.
Vaild point.
Your reports are interesting...but unless I missed it (I did skim fairly quickly), I'd be curious to see what the data looked like before the plant went up.
That would be an interesting comparision. I know what you mean, but just for the sake of clarity when people read this, those arent my reports. Just the public data I could locate.