EARTHWORKS

Mercury air pollution from gold mines has dropped by half!

Bonnie Gestring's avatar
By Bonnie Gestring

December 10, 2013

image

It's great to have some good news to share, and this one's a whopper.  Mercury air pollution from U.S. gold mines has dropped by half - from over 5,000 pounds in 2006 to 2,500 pounds in 2012.  This is a remarkable change!

The biggest polluters were giant, open-pit gold mines in northern Nevada, where the amount of mercury pollution was off the charts!  Yet, there were no regulations that required these mines to control their emissions.

In 2007, Nevada enacted state-wide regulations, and in 2010, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) followed suit with regulations that require all gold mines in the U.S. to use pollution control devices and meet emission limits.

Earthworks worked hard on both sets of regulations, and we're happy to see the decline in emissions. But, most importantly, these reductions are good news for public health, particularly children who are most vulnerable to mercury pollution! 

Tagged with: regulation, mercury, epa, air pollution

comments powered by Disqus

On Twitter

#Mining proposal threatens #Arizona town's #water supply bit.ly/1yU9YDX @highcountrynews @tory_sarah
#Mining the deep sea could destroy an alien world we barely know on.nrdc.org/1ws0sJL @onEarthMag

On Facebook