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Safer Communities

 

What's New

Congress is deliberating over HR 2868 – the Chemical Facilities Anti-Terrorism Act of 2009 – legislation that would require the highest-risk chemical facilities to convert to feasible cost-effective safer alternatives.

The October 2009 expiration of the Chemical Facility Anti-Terrorism Act of 2006 gives the opportunity Congress to revisit and strengthen the CFATS standards and regulations.

These proposed changes would establish risk-based standards that require companies to move toward more secure chemicals or processes where feasible.  The existing law currently bars the government from requiring the use of safer processes and exempts all 2,600 water facilities.

On June 16th Liz Hitchcock, US PIRG’s Public Health advocate, provided testimony for the Homeland Security Committee’s hearing on the bill, urging committee members to pass HR 2868 before the expiration of current CFATS program.

To protect citizens from toxic hazards in their communities, Congress should pass the Chemical Facility Anti-Terrorism Act of 2009 to reduce the consequences of an accident or attack by replacing toxic chemicals with available and feasible safer alternatives.

Overview

•    According to the EPA, nearly 2,700 facilities endanger more than 10,000 people in the event of a catastrophe at the facility, either caused by an accident or a purposeful attack on the facility.

•    110 million Americans live in the shadow of catastrophic poison gas release from one of 300 chemical facilities. And as we saw with the 9/11 attacks, conventional fence-line security cannot prevent a successful attack and the devastating consequences.

•    An attack or accident at one of these facilities would result in more casualties than 9/11 or the 1984 disaster at Union Carbide's Bhopal, India plant.

Safer more secure chemical processes already exist that can replace virtually all of these hazards. 

•    More than 200 water treatment facilities (including Washington, D.C.) have converted to safer alternatives such as ultraviolet light, eliminating the use of chlorine and sulfur dioxide gas. But over 100 water treatment plants still threaten more than 100,000 people.

•    Ninety-eight petroleum refineries use safer alternatives to hydrogen fluoride (HF). But 50 refineries still threaten millions of people with the use of HF.

•    At least 36 electric power plants use safer alternatives to anhydrous ammonia gas such as dry urea.  But 166 power plants still use anhydrous ammonia gas each threatening an average of 21,506 people.



This map from our partner Center for American Progress details the nation’s 101 most dangerous chemical facilities. Click here for more information.

 

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