The Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban visited Kolontar, the site of the spill on Thursday and said there was no point in even removing the rubble from part of the village as it was impossible to live there again, according to the article below. The toxic spill of red sludge from the alumina plant reservoir was an ecological disaster and has now reached the Danube River, prompting yet more problems..
. . . June
Toxic Hungarian sludge spill reaches River Danube
By Marton Dunai Gyor, Hungary
Hungary declared a state of emergency in three counties on Tuesday after the torrent of caustic waste sludge from bauxite refining hit Kolontar, Devecser and other villages 160 km (100 miles) west of Budapest.
Prime Minister Viktor Orban visited Kolontar on Thursday and said there was no point in even removing the rubble from part of the village as it was impossible to live there again.
"It is difficult to find the words. Had this happened at night, everybody would be dead," he told reporters.
"CATASTROPHE"
"This is an unprecedented ecological catastrophe in Hungary. Human error is more than likely. The wall (of the reservoir) did not disintegrate in a minute. This should have been detected."
MAL Zrt, owner of the Ajkai Timfoldgyar alumina plant and the burst reservoir, said the last inspection of the reservoir on Monday had shown nothing wrong.
Disaster crews, military and local villagers were clearing away the rubble and searching for the three missing people.
Many people suffered burns and eye ailments caused by the caustic mud. The flood, estimated at about 700,000 cubic meters (24 million cubic feet), swept cars off roads and damaged bridges and houses.
MAL said it hoped to restart production at its alumina plant at the weekend with a new sludge containment pond.
Many people in Kolontar said they would not move back to their houses as they did not feel secure.
Read More
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A flood of caustic red mud triggered a state of emergency declaration by Hungarian officials. At least four people were killed, six were missing and 120 injured, many with burns.
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Friday, October 29, 2010
Canadian Researcher Believes RED MUD Could Transform Bio Oil Industry
If a Canadian researcher has his way, the red mud that caused disaster last week could turn very useful indeed. According to the article below, Marcel Schlaf, a chemistry professor at the University of Guelph believes that red mud could help transform bio oil derived from plant waste into fuel or into something usable that could be used to make anything from ceramics to cement.
... June
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Out of the red
World - Macleans.ca:
The Danube River is famously blue, but after a recent toxic waste spill in Hungary, parts of it were flooded with a sickly red slurry. On Oct. 4, a reservoir wall had collapsed at an alumina plant near the village of Kolontar, releasing over 750 million litres of red mud—a byproduct of turning bauxite to alumina, which is needed for aluminum production. The disaster forced hundreds from their homes and left nine dead. The red mud was waist-deep in some places, locals reported; one witness said it smelled like blood.
A chemical soup of heavy metals and minerals (including iron oxide, hence its colour), red mud is highly corrosive; workers in Hungary measured the pH level and found that, in some places, it was as caustic as bleach. It can even be slightly radioactive. (Rio Tinto Alcan’s alumina processing plant in Quebec is the only one in Canada; it has withstood flooding and an earthquake without incident, a spokesman noted, adding that it’s “highly unlikely” such a spill could occur here.) We end up creating 63 million tonnes of red mud each year worldwide, but we still don’t know what to do with it: red mud is typically stored in reservoirs, dried out and buried, but it’s so chemically stable it won’t really break down. Marcel Schlaf, a chemistry professor at the University of Guelph, has a better idea. Red mud, he believes, could help transform bio oil derived from plant waste into fuel.
Bio oil is produced by pyrolysis, when biomass (organic waste, grass clippings, etc.) is rapidly heated in the absence of oxygen. Fossil fuels are created as “biomass is transformed over millions of years, deep in the Earth under high pressure,” says Franco Berruti, director of the University of Western Ontario’s Institute for Chemicals and Fuels from Alternative Resources. In the lab, “we do it in seconds. But we are not as good as nature.” Unlike fossil fuels, bio oil contains water and oxygen; it’s very acidic and hard to ignite, and if it’s overheated, it can solidify. What’s more, “it’s black, it’s viscous and it smells really bad, like concentrated barbecue sauce,” Berruti says.
About two years ago, Schlaf was teaching an undergraduate class about red mud, he says, when “a light went off.” He looked harder at the mud’s composition, and realized it might contain the right mix of metals to catalyze chemical reactions and upgrade bio oil, which he acquired from Berruti’s lab. (His findings were published in the journal Energy & Fuels earlier this year.) “The acidity of bio oil neutralizes the alkalinity of red mud,” he says, and “turns the bio oil into something usable.” It might turn red mud into something usable, too. After its transformation, “it’s no longer red; it’s grey and magnetic,” he says, and could be used to make anything from ceramics to cement.
Schlaf cautions that we won’t be running our cars on red-mud-treated bio oil any time soon; the research is in its early days. (He’s working with Murray Thomson, an engineer at the University of Toronto, to see how the upgraded oil works as a fuel.) Still, it’s an exciting idea, especially given our dwindling supply of fossil fuels.
“The beautiful thing is that you’ve taken mining waste on one side, [agricultural waste] on the other,” and created a fuel, he says. With vats of red sludge just waiting to become landfill, it sounds almost too good to be true.
Read entire article
---------------
... June
-------------------------------
Out of the red
World - Macleans.ca:
The Danube River is famously blue, but after a recent toxic waste spill in Hungary, parts of it were flooded with a sickly red slurry. On Oct. 4, a reservoir wall had collapsed at an alumina plant near the village of Kolontar, releasing over 750 million litres of red mud—a byproduct of turning bauxite to alumina, which is needed for aluminum production. The disaster forced hundreds from their homes and left nine dead. The red mud was waist-deep in some places, locals reported; one witness said it smelled like blood.
A chemical soup of heavy metals and minerals (including iron oxide, hence its colour), red mud is highly corrosive; workers in Hungary measured the pH level and found that, in some places, it was as caustic as bleach. It can even be slightly radioactive. (Rio Tinto Alcan’s alumina processing plant in Quebec is the only one in Canada; it has withstood flooding and an earthquake without incident, a spokesman noted, adding that it’s “highly unlikely” such a spill could occur here.) We end up creating 63 million tonnes of red mud each year worldwide, but we still don’t know what to do with it: red mud is typically stored in reservoirs, dried out and buried, but it’s so chemically stable it won’t really break down. Marcel Schlaf, a chemistry professor at the University of Guelph, has a better idea. Red mud, he believes, could help transform bio oil derived from plant waste into fuel.
Bio oil is produced by pyrolysis, when biomass (organic waste, grass clippings, etc.) is rapidly heated in the absence of oxygen. Fossil fuels are created as “biomass is transformed over millions of years, deep in the Earth under high pressure,” says Franco Berruti, director of the University of Western Ontario’s Institute for Chemicals and Fuels from Alternative Resources. In the lab, “we do it in seconds. But we are not as good as nature.” Unlike fossil fuels, bio oil contains water and oxygen; it’s very acidic and hard to ignite, and if it’s overheated, it can solidify. What’s more, “it’s black, it’s viscous and it smells really bad, like concentrated barbecue sauce,” Berruti says.
About two years ago, Schlaf was teaching an undergraduate class about red mud, he says, when “a light went off.” He looked harder at the mud’s composition, and realized it might contain the right mix of metals to catalyze chemical reactions and upgrade bio oil, which he acquired from Berruti’s lab. (His findings were published in the journal Energy & Fuels earlier this year.) “The acidity of bio oil neutralizes the alkalinity of red mud,” he says, and “turns the bio oil into something usable.” It might turn red mud into something usable, too. After its transformation, “it’s no longer red; it’s grey and magnetic,” he says, and could be used to make anything from ceramics to cement.
Schlaf cautions that we won’t be running our cars on red-mud-treated bio oil any time soon; the research is in its early days. (He’s working with Murray Thomson, an engineer at the University of Toronto, to see how the upgraded oil works as a fuel.) Still, it’s an exciting idea, especially given our dwindling supply of fossil fuels.
“The beautiful thing is that you’ve taken mining waste on one side, [agricultural waste] on the other,” and created a fuel, he says. With vats of red sludge just waiting to become landfill, it sounds almost too good to be true.
Read entire article
---------------
Monday, October 18, 2010
Are The Effects Of Toxic Mud In Black Sea Inevitable?
The toxic red sludge that spilled from an aluminum plant in western Hungary into several villages and then flowed to the Danube River two weeks ago will inevitably pose certain risks for the Black Sea, according to Professor Faruk Yorulmaz from Trakya University in the article below. He also cautioned that the toxic materials are also mixing into the air via dust and pose a major health risk for humans. I guess no one knows the long-term damage
. . . June
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‘Hungarian toxic mud’s effects in Black Sea inevitable’
Today's Zaman 19 October 2010, Tuesday
"Professor Faruk Yorulmaz from Trakya University has said the toxic red sludge that spilled from an aluminum plant in western Hungary into several villages and then flowed to the Danube River two weeks ago will inevitably pose certain risks for the Black Sea.
“The toxic waste will be diluted in the Black Sea but will nonetheless still pose risks. Starting from the northern coast where the Danube River meets the sea, the spill will particularly affect the coasts of our western Black Sea region,” Yorulmaz -- who is the head of the public health department at the university -- said in an interview with the Anatolia news agency.
The spill first engulfed several villages in the area and then reached the Danube River, which flows into the Black Sea, with which Turkey has its longest coast. Named for its bright red color, the material is a waste product in aluminum production that contains heavy metals and is toxic if ingested. Yorulmaz said some statements were made in regard to non-toxic levels of mercury and heavy metals, but no one discussed what to do with the 50 tons of arsenic and 300 tons of chromium contained in the waste as Greenpeace suggested earlier.
He cautioned that the toxic materials are also mixing into the air via dust and pose a major health risk for humans. “If the toxin inside the dust is taken inside body, it is said that it may cause apical pneumonia and even lung cancer after many years,” he said.
Read entire article
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. . . June
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‘Hungarian toxic mud’s effects in Black Sea inevitable’
Today's Zaman 19 October 2010, Tuesday
"Professor Faruk Yorulmaz from Trakya University has said the toxic red sludge that spilled from an aluminum plant in western Hungary into several villages and then flowed to the Danube River two weeks ago will inevitably pose certain risks for the Black Sea.
“The toxic waste will be diluted in the Black Sea but will nonetheless still pose risks. Starting from the northern coast where the Danube River meets the sea, the spill will particularly affect the coasts of our western Black Sea region,” Yorulmaz -- who is the head of the public health department at the university -- said in an interview with the Anatolia news agency.
The spill first engulfed several villages in the area and then reached the Danube River, which flows into the Black Sea, with which Turkey has its longest coast. Named for its bright red color, the material is a waste product in aluminum production that contains heavy metals and is toxic if ingested. Yorulmaz said some statements were made in regard to non-toxic levels of mercury and heavy metals, but no one discussed what to do with the 50 tons of arsenic and 300 tons of chromium contained in the waste as Greenpeace suggested earlier.
He cautioned that the toxic materials are also mixing into the air via dust and pose a major health risk for humans. “If the toxin inside the dust is taken inside body, it is said that it may cause apical pneumonia and even lung cancer after many years,” he said.
Read entire article
--------------------
Saturday, October 16, 2010
The Damaged Red Sludge Reservoir Appears Stable
According to the article below, authorities say cracks in the walls of a broken reservoir that released a deluge of toxic red sludge on several towns have not grown any wider, and a mayor says he hopes a state of alert can be called off.
Gallons of caustic sludge and water burst from a storage pool of a metals plant.
Authorities fear that if the cracks widen and the wall falls, it could release another flood of that toxic mix. Please God it doesn't happen.
. . . June
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Hungary`s damaged red sludge reservoir seen stable
2010-10-14 21:20:00
"Authorities say cracks in the walls of a broken reservoir that released a deluge of toxic red sludge on several towns have not grown any wider, and a mayor says he hopes a state of alert can be called off.
The National Disaster Management Directorate also said Wednesday that the death toll in western Hungary had risen to nine after an elderly man died overnight. Around 50 people are still hospitalized.
Devecser Mayor Tamas Toldi says he hopes the state of alert can be called off once a protective wall in neighboring Kolontar is completed.
Some 700,000 cubic meters (184 million gallons) of caustic sludge and water burst from a storage pool of a metals plant.
Authorities fear that if the cracks widen and the wall falls, it could release another flood
Read entire article
Gallons of caustic sludge and water burst from a storage pool of a metals plant.
Authorities fear that if the cracks widen and the wall falls, it could release another flood of that toxic mix. Please God it doesn't happen.
. . . June
--------------------------
Hungary`s damaged red sludge reservoir seen stable
2010-10-14 21:20:00
"Authorities say cracks in the walls of a broken reservoir that released a deluge of toxic red sludge on several towns have not grown any wider, and a mayor says he hopes a state of alert can be called off.
The National Disaster Management Directorate also said Wednesday that the death toll in western Hungary had risen to nine after an elderly man died overnight. Around 50 people are still hospitalized.
Devecser Mayor Tamas Toldi says he hopes the state of alert can be called off once a protective wall in neighboring Kolontar is completed.
Some 700,000 cubic meters (184 million gallons) of caustic sludge and water burst from a storage pool of a metals plant.
Authorities fear that if the cracks widen and the wall falls, it could release another flood
Read entire article
Monday, October 11, 2010
Managing Director ARRESTED For Role in Red Sludge
According to the following article, the managing director of the company whose reservoir unleashed a lethal torrent of red sludge on three villages last week has been arrested. Apparently, there is cause to suspect that there were people aware of the dangerous weakening of the storage walls. I'm very much afraid that there are likely many other similar storage facilities in the same state of disrepair.
. . . June
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Hungary Arrests Official, Citing Role in Red Sludge
NYTimes.com: "By DAN BILEFSKY Published: October 11, 2010
BUDAPEST — The managing director of the company whose reservoir unleashed a lethal torrent of red sludge on three villages last week has been arrested, the Hungarian prime minister said Monday, castigating the company for corporate greed before Parliament.
“There’s probable cause to suspect that there were persons who had been aware of the dangerous weakening of the storage pond walls,” Prime Minister Viktor Orban said, “but they thought, because of their private interests, that it was not worth mending them and hoped the disaster wouldn’t happen.”
But the arrest also revealed the complex intersections of business and politics within the state companies that were privatized in a rush in the 1990s.
The arrested official, Zoltan Bakonyi, is the son of Arpad Bakonyi, a businessman who played a central role in the privatization of the country’s aluminum industry and is the largest shareholder of the company now under scrutiny, the formerly state-owned MAL. The elder Mr. Bakonyi is also a close business associate of a former prime minister, Ferenc Gyurcsany, who is Mr. Orban’s political archrival.
The younger Mr. Bakonyi will be charged with criminal negligence leading to a public catastrophe, a government spokeswoman said. If convicted, he could face a sentence of up to 10 years.
In a statement to the Hungarian news agency M.T.I., he denied breaking any rules and said that the most recent inspections had shown no anomalies. “We observed every regulation to the letter,” he said.
A week ago, nearly 200 million gallons of caustic red mud — a byproduct of the conversion of bauxite to alumina, for aluminum — poured out of a reservoir after part of its containing wall collapsed. The cascade killed eight people and injured hundreds. Hundreds more have been forced from their homes, and tens of millions of dollars in private property has been destroyed.
Read Entire article
. . . June
-----------------------
Hungary Arrests Official, Citing Role in Red Sludge
NYTimes.com: "By DAN BILEFSKY Published: October 11, 2010
BUDAPEST — The managing director of the company whose reservoir unleashed a lethal torrent of red sludge on three villages last week has been arrested, the Hungarian prime minister said Monday, castigating the company for corporate greed before Parliament.
“There’s probable cause to suspect that there were persons who had been aware of the dangerous weakening of the storage pond walls,” Prime Minister Viktor Orban said, “but they thought, because of their private interests, that it was not worth mending them and hoped the disaster wouldn’t happen.”
But the arrest also revealed the complex intersections of business and politics within the state companies that were privatized in a rush in the 1990s.
The arrested official, Zoltan Bakonyi, is the son of Arpad Bakonyi, a businessman who played a central role in the privatization of the country’s aluminum industry and is the largest shareholder of the company now under scrutiny, the formerly state-owned MAL. The elder Mr. Bakonyi is also a close business associate of a former prime minister, Ferenc Gyurcsany, who is Mr. Orban’s political archrival.
The younger Mr. Bakonyi will be charged with criminal negligence leading to a public catastrophe, a government spokeswoman said. If convicted, he could face a sentence of up to 10 years.
In a statement to the Hungarian news agency M.T.I., he denied breaking any rules and said that the most recent inspections had shown no anomalies. “We observed every regulation to the letter,” he said.
A week ago, nearly 200 million gallons of caustic red mud — a byproduct of the conversion of bauxite to alumina, for aluminum — poured out of a reservoir after part of its containing wall collapsed. The cascade killed eight people and injured hundreds. Hundreds more have been forced from their homes, and tens of millions of dollars in private property has been destroyed.
Read Entire article
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Workers Race To BUILD DAM Ahead Of Reservoir Rupture
According to the article below, workers race to build an emergency dam in western Hungary as cracks in the reservoir widen, threatening to unleash a second torrent of toxic sludge. One of the biggest fears with any new spill is the danger that it could reach the Danube River. The toxicity in that main European waterway could spread it far and wide.
. . . June
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Hungary races to build dam amid new sludge threat
Yahoo! News: By Gergely Szakacs Gergely Szakacs – Sun Oct 10, 12:44 pm ET
BUDAPEST (Reuters) – Workers raced to build an emergency dam in western Hungary on Sunday as cracks in a reservoir widened, threatening to unleash a second torrent of toxic sludge on the village of Kolontar and nearby rivers.
About one million cubic meters of the waste material leaked out of the alumina plant reservoir into villages and waterways earlier this week, killing seven people, injuring 123 and fouling rivers including a local branch of the Danube.
Nearly a week into the disaster, a person was still missing.
Kolontar was evacuated on Saturday after cracks appeared in the northern wall of the reservoir, threatening a second spill of the toxic red sludge, which swept through neighboring areas on Monday, toppling cars and wreaking havoc in houses.
A by-product of alumina production, the thick, highly alkaline substance has a caustic effect on the skin. It contains heavy metals, such as lead, and is slightly radioactive. Inhaling its dust can cause lung cancer.
Late on Sunday the Veszprem county disaster unit advised crews and residents in the area affected by Monday's spill to wear protective masks and glasses as dust levels in some places had exceeded the health limit as the sludge was drying out.
It said the dust can irritate airways due to its alkalinity.
News agency MTI quoted environment state secretary Zoltan Illes as saying a 25-meter-long crack in the weakened wall of the sludge reservoir had widened slightly further by Sunday and the wall now looked beyond repair.
Illes said the northern wall of the reservoir could collapse "within one day or a week" and crews at the scene were scrambling to complete a new dam to protect Kolontar and the nearby town of Devecser, home to 5,400 people.
Illes said authorities had amassed plaster and various types of acids along 100 kilometers (60 miles) of the river Marcal to neutralize the high alkaline content of any new spill before it reaches the Danube, a major European waterway.
Read entire article
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. . . June
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Hungary races to build dam amid new sludge threat
Yahoo! News: By Gergely Szakacs Gergely Szakacs – Sun Oct 10, 12:44 pm ET
BUDAPEST (Reuters) – Workers raced to build an emergency dam in western Hungary on Sunday as cracks in a reservoir widened, threatening to unleash a second torrent of toxic sludge on the village of Kolontar and nearby rivers.
About one million cubic meters of the waste material leaked out of the alumina plant reservoir into villages and waterways earlier this week, killing seven people, injuring 123 and fouling rivers including a local branch of the Danube.
Nearly a week into the disaster, a person was still missing.
Kolontar was evacuated on Saturday after cracks appeared in the northern wall of the reservoir, threatening a second spill of the toxic red sludge, which swept through neighboring areas on Monday, toppling cars and wreaking havoc in houses.
A by-product of alumina production, the thick, highly alkaline substance has a caustic effect on the skin. It contains heavy metals, such as lead, and is slightly radioactive. Inhaling its dust can cause lung cancer.
Late on Sunday the Veszprem county disaster unit advised crews and residents in the area affected by Monday's spill to wear protective masks and glasses as dust levels in some places had exceeded the health limit as the sludge was drying out.
It said the dust can irritate airways due to its alkalinity.
News agency MTI quoted environment state secretary Zoltan Illes as saying a 25-meter-long crack in the weakened wall of the sludge reservoir had widened slightly further by Sunday and the wall now looked beyond repair.
Illes said the northern wall of the reservoir could collapse "within one day or a week" and crews at the scene were scrambling to complete a new dam to protect Kolontar and the nearby town of Devecser, home to 5,400 people.
Illes said authorities had amassed plaster and various types of acids along 100 kilometers (60 miles) of the river Marcal to neutralize the high alkaline content of any new spill before it reaches the Danube, a major European waterway.
Read entire article
-------------------------
Saturday, October 9, 2010
RED SLUDGE Reservoir At Risk Of Collapse
The rest of the collapsed reservoir is apparently in imminent danger of collapsing, according to the article below, sending a new wave of caustic red sludge into towns devastated by a deluge this week. The nearest town has already been evacuated. This is really a great disaster, but it frightens me to think that there must be many other toxic waste facilities which are also in great danger of the same problem.
. . . . June
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Hungary sludge reservoir at risk of collapse
- Yahoo! News: By BELA SZANDELSZKY AND PABLO GORONDI, Associated Press Sat Oct 9, 10:06 am ET
DEVECSER, Hungary – The cracking wall of an industrial plant reservoir could collapse at any moment and send a new wave of caustic red sludge into towns devastated by a deluge this week, Hungary's prime minister said Saturday.
A crack in the concrete wall widened by 2.76 inches (7 centimeters) overnight, Prime Minister Viktor Orban told reporters gathered at a fire station near the alumina plant that dumped up to 184 million gallons (700,000 cubic meters) of highly polluted water and mud onto three villages in about an hour Monday, burning people and animals. At least seven people were killed and hundreds injured.
Orban did not say how wide the crack had been, but he described collapse as imminent.
"Probably today, the wall could come down. I cannot say that it will happen surely, but already the risk is there," he said. "Cracks have appeared on the northern wall of the reservoir, which makes it very likely that the whole wall will collapse."
Red sludge is a byproduct of the refining of bauxite into alumina, the basic material for manufacturing aluminum. Treated sludge is often stored in ponds where the water eventually evaporates, leaving behind a largely safe red clay. Industry experts say the sludge in Hungary appears to have been insufficiently treated, if at all, meaning it remained highly caustic.
Most of what spilled Monday when the northeast corner of the reservoir collapsed was water, leaving behind slower-moving mud that has been kept in place by the remaining walls and barriers hastily erected in front of the ruptured section.
Orban said officials have started to build dams to the north, in the direction of lower-lying populated areas, to slow the mud in case of a second rupture.
The neighboring town of Kolontar, which was hit hardest in Monday's spill, has been evacuated. Officials believe they will have time to evacuate the next town of Devecser, 2.5 miles (4 kilometers) further north.
The prime minister said experts had estimated that an estimated 500,000 cubic meters of red sludge could escape from the reservoir if the wall collapsed, but said exact figures were hard to calculate.
Read entire article
. . . . June
---------------------------
Hungary sludge reservoir at risk of collapse
- Yahoo! News: By BELA SZANDELSZKY AND PABLO GORONDI, Associated Press Sat Oct 9, 10:06 am ET
DEVECSER, Hungary – The cracking wall of an industrial plant reservoir could collapse at any moment and send a new wave of caustic red sludge into towns devastated by a deluge this week, Hungary's prime minister said Saturday.
A crack in the concrete wall widened by 2.76 inches (7 centimeters) overnight, Prime Minister Viktor Orban told reporters gathered at a fire station near the alumina plant that dumped up to 184 million gallons (700,000 cubic meters) of highly polluted water and mud onto three villages in about an hour Monday, burning people and animals. At least seven people were killed and hundreds injured.
Orban did not say how wide the crack had been, but he described collapse as imminent.
"Probably today, the wall could come down. I cannot say that it will happen surely, but already the risk is there," he said. "Cracks have appeared on the northern wall of the reservoir, which makes it very likely that the whole wall will collapse."
Red sludge is a byproduct of the refining of bauxite into alumina, the basic material for manufacturing aluminum. Treated sludge is often stored in ponds where the water eventually evaporates, leaving behind a largely safe red clay. Industry experts say the sludge in Hungary appears to have been insufficiently treated, if at all, meaning it remained highly caustic.
Most of what spilled Monday when the northeast corner of the reservoir collapsed was water, leaving behind slower-moving mud that has been kept in place by the remaining walls and barriers hastily erected in front of the ruptured section.
Orban said officials have started to build dams to the north, in the direction of lower-lying populated areas, to slow the mud in case of a second rupture.
The neighboring town of Kolontar, which was hit hardest in Monday's spill, has been evacuated. Officials believe they will have time to evacuate the next town of Devecser, 2.5 miles (4 kilometers) further north.
The prime minister said experts had estimated that an estimated 500,000 cubic meters of red sludge could escape from the reservoir if the wall collapsed, but said exact figures were hard to calculate.
Read entire article
Friday, October 8, 2010
Cleanup Effort After TOXIC MUD Floods Devastate Villages
According to the following article, relief efforts aren't going well following the toxic mud floods from the burst reservoir in Hungary. Residents of the nearby towns and villages are finding it increasingly hard to cope with the damages. Five people were killed, at least 150 injured, and three people are still missing while several hundred more left homeless after the red tide crashed through their homes and gardens.
. . . June
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Villagers struggle with cleanup effort after toxic mud flood
The Observers:
Five days after one million cubic metres of toxic red sludge spilled out of a burst reservoir at an alumina plant in western Hungary, residents of the nearby towns and villages are finding it increasingly hard to cope with the damages.
Five people were killed and at least 150 injured in the resulting floods in seven villages around the Ajkai Timfoldgyar alumina plant, located 100 km west of Budapest. Three people are still missing and several hundred more left homeless after the red tide crashed through their homes and gardens.
The material, a residue of aluminium, is highly alkaline and slightly radioactive. Fears are growing that the pollution might spread to other European countries after it reached the Danube on Thursday. But on Friday officials said that alkalinity levels from the spill had subsided in the river and that there was no risk of a major environmental catastrophe across the region.
However, mercury, arsenic and chromium levels are still abnormally high in Kolontar and Devecser, the villages worst hit by the floods. Viktor Orban, the Hungarian prime minister, visited Kolontar on Thursday and said there was no point in even removing the rubble from part of the village as it was impossible to live there again.
Read more
. . . June
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Villagers struggle with cleanup effort after toxic mud flood
The Observers:
Five days after one million cubic metres of toxic red sludge spilled out of a burst reservoir at an alumina plant in western Hungary, residents of the nearby towns and villages are finding it increasingly hard to cope with the damages.
Five people were killed and at least 150 injured in the resulting floods in seven villages around the Ajkai Timfoldgyar alumina plant, located 100 km west of Budapest. Three people are still missing and several hundred more left homeless after the red tide crashed through their homes and gardens.
The material, a residue of aluminium, is highly alkaline and slightly radioactive. Fears are growing that the pollution might spread to other European countries after it reached the Danube on Thursday. But on Friday officials said that alkalinity levels from the spill had subsided in the river and that there was no risk of a major environmental catastrophe across the region.
However, mercury, arsenic and chromium levels are still abnormally high in Kolontar and Devecser, the villages worst hit by the floods. Viktor Orban, the Hungarian prime minister, visited Kolontar on Thursday and said there was no point in even removing the rubble from part of the village as it was impossible to live there again.
"The relief effort is not well organised"
Zsuzsa Halmay lives in Somlójenő, one of the villages in the area affected by the floods. She is a member of the Hungarian Green party, (Politics can be different - LMP), whose activists have been volunteering to help with the cleanup and relief efforts.
We are trying to organise ourselves to help people in the affected areas, but it is very difficult because the scale of the damage is so huge. We are working on two fronts: volunteering to clean and disinfect damaged property, as well as collecting money, food, cloths and goods to distribute to the flood victims.
Read more
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Toxic RED SLUDGE From A Metal Refinery Engulfed Towns In Hungary
How horrible to be suddenly confronted by a tide of toxic sludge which burns through your clothes. That's what these villagers in Hungary were faced with. According to the article below, the flood of caustic red mud triggered a state of emergency declaration by Hungarian officials. At least four people were killed, six were missing and 120 injured, many with burns. Hundreds were evacuated.
. . . June
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Hungary sludge flood called 'ecological disaster'
Yahoo! News: "By BELA SZANDELSZKY and PABLO GORONDI, Associated Press Writers
KOLONTAR, Hungary – A lethal torrent of toxic red sludge from a metal refinery engulfed towns in Hungary, burning villagers through their clothes and threatening an ecological disaster Tuesday as it swept toward the Danube River.
The flood of caustic red mud triggered a state of emergency declaration by Hungarian officials. At least four people were killed, six were missing and 120 injured, many with burns.
Hundreds were evacuated in the aftermath of the disaster Monday, when a gigantic sludge reservoir burst its banks at an alumina plant in Ajka, a town 100 miles (160 kilometers) southwest of Budapest, the capital. The torrent of sludge inundated homes, swept cars off roads and damaged bridges.
Named for its bright red color, the material is a waste product in aluminum production that contains heavy metals and is toxic if ingested.
In Kolontar, the town closest to the plant, Erzsebet Veingartner was in her kitchen when the 12-foot-high wave of red slurry hit, sweeping away everything in its path.
"I looked outside and all I saw was the stream swelling like a huge wave," the 61-year-old widow said Tuesday as she surveyed her backyard, still under 6 feet of noxious muck.
Read entire article
. . . June
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Hungary sludge flood called 'ecological disaster'
Yahoo! News: "By BELA SZANDELSZKY and PABLO GORONDI, Associated Press Writers
KOLONTAR, Hungary – A lethal torrent of toxic red sludge from a metal refinery engulfed towns in Hungary, burning villagers through their clothes and threatening an ecological disaster Tuesday as it swept toward the Danube River.
The flood of caustic red mud triggered a state of emergency declaration by Hungarian officials. At least four people were killed, six were missing and 120 injured, many with burns.
Hundreds were evacuated in the aftermath of the disaster Monday, when a gigantic sludge reservoir burst its banks at an alumina plant in Ajka, a town 100 miles (160 kilometers) southwest of Budapest, the capital. The torrent of sludge inundated homes, swept cars off roads and damaged bridges.
Named for its bright red color, the material is a waste product in aluminum production that contains heavy metals and is toxic if ingested.
In Kolontar, the town closest to the plant, Erzsebet Veingartner was in her kitchen when the 12-foot-high wave of red slurry hit, sweeping away everything in its path.
"I looked outside and all I saw was the stream swelling like a huge wave," the 61-year-old widow said Tuesday as she surveyed her backyard, still under 6 feet of noxious muck.
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