Alcoa's
proposed Smelter in Iceland facing
massive protests. How do
Iceland and Trinidad Compare?
Iceland:
Population: 294,000 (UN, 2005)
Area: 103,000 sq km (39,769 sq miles)
Trinidad:
Population 1.300,000
(TT Gov't)
Area: 4,828 sq km (1,864 sq. miles)
- Still think this project is SAFE for
a small place like Trinidad?
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Mother
of Icelandic Pop Star Bjork at Day 11 of her hunger strike against
Alcoa's smelter in Iceland. How far are you willing to go for the
future of our country? |
Alcoa's Alarming Record on Pollution
"Alcoa, Inc. is one of the worst polluters on the planet. They are at
the forefront of poisoning the air, land and water of Texas, the most
heavily polluted state in the nation. Alcoa has grandfathered
facilities exempt from the 1971 Clean Air Act. In Texas alone, it has
several hundred plants that are accountable for the mounting pollution
problems this of the state." ..... Rockdale, Texas, located around 50
miles east of Austin, is home to a plant that sprawls over 7,000 acres
and runs 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. It is powered by four on-site
power plants, three of which were built before the Clean Air Act of
1971 was approved. It contributes to the pollution problems in Austin
and the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. The aluminum smelter here
discharges roughly 104,000 tons of air emissions per year, including
over 60,000 tons of acid rain. .....Alcoa says that if it were forced
to comply with state and national clean air laws, the alterations in
equipment would be so expensive that the company would be forced to
shut down the Rockdale plant; instead of doing this, they’ll
keep the plant running and contaminate the area. .....Between the years
1983 to 1987 at a time when they were under scrutiny to maintain clean
facilities, Alcoa spent $62 million to upgrade their facilities without
consent from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) nor the Texas
Natural Resource Conservation Commission (TNRCC), blatantly violating
federal law. Large increases in air pollution ensued in 1988, including
nitrous oxides, particulate matter (which contain human carcinogens),
carbon monoxide, and an annual increase of 13,000 tons of sulfur
dioxide since completion of the modifications. Although Alcoa blatantly
violated federal law, neither the EPA nor the TNRCC pressed charges.
.....
| This
Information is dated: |
2000 |
....Since
1987, more than forty-seven Alcoa facilities have been cited for
pollution violations by state and federal regulators. In one instance
when the EPA opposed Alcoa, they along with the Justice Department
filed claims against the company as reported March 14, 2000. In the
agreement, Alcoa consented to pay about $8.8 million to clean the
Mississippi River Basin, reduce hazardous waste generation, and
research new air pollution reduction technology.....
...In
Port Allen, LA, Discovery Aluminas, Inc., an Alcoa subsidy, pleaded
guilty to contaminating the water and was fined over one million
dollars by the state and the federal government. In Point Comfort, TX,
Alcoa was fined $181,400 for emission violations in its bauxite
refining plant.....
.....Alcoa
was also cited for illegal export practices. They shipped potassium
fluoride and sodium fluoride to Jamaica and Suriname on 50 separate
occasions without obtaining the required Commerce export licenses, then
lied about it. They were hit with a $750,000 civil penalty.......
Source- www.utwatch.org/corporations/alcoa.html
| This Information
is dated: |
2002 |
Alcoa
to pay $550,000 settlement for water pollution at Indiana plant
LAFAYETTE, Ind. -- Alcoa Inc. will pay $550,000 to settle a federal
lawsuit alleging the aluminum maker's aerospace products plant violated
water pollution limits.....Source-U.S. Water News Online February
2002
| This
Information is dated: |
2002 |
Jamaica - Alcoa puts damper on
residents' claims
Jamacia Observer - Thursday, January 17, 2002
ALCOA, the bauxite company in Clarendon that was, in 1994, ordered to
pay just under $1 million for the damage its mining operations did to
the house of a resident in the nearby Hayes community, has made it
clear that it has no intention of settling an additional 59 claims
without a fight.
Consequentially, the 59 residents who relied on Broderick's case as a
test and, in the wake of the victory he scored, had been anticipating a
settlement of their own, now face the possibility of having to prove,
one by one, that the damage to their houses was done by Alcoa. More on this story
| This
Information is dated: |
2004 |
Mining
company fined for air pollution
December 23, 2004
ABC News-A Perth magistrate has imposed a $60,000 fine on mining
company Alcoa for polluting the air around its Wagerup refinery. Alcoa
pleaded guilty to the pollution charge that related to Bauxite residue
dust blowing over Wagerup and Yarloop, south of Perth, in November 2002.
Source
- www.minesandcommunities.org/Action/press513.htm
Alcoa's
World of Crime
Click on
the Links below to read all about Alcoa around the world:
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