Jan 18, 2010

EPA Proposes Standards to decrease gulf 'dead zone' pollution and help Protect Florida’s Waters

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency HTML clipboard(EPA) is proposing water quality standards to protect people's health, aquatic life and the long term recreational uses of Florida's waters, which are a critical part of the state's economy. In 2009, EPA entered into a consent decree with the Florida Wildlife Federation to propose limits to this pollution. The proposed action, released for public comment and developed in collaboration with the state, would set a series of numeric limits on the amount of phosphorus and nitrogen, also known as "nutrients," that would be allowed in Florida's lakes, rivers, streams, springs and canals.http://serc.carleton.edu/images/microbelife/topics/Sat_image_deadzone.jpg

Nutrient pollution can damage drinking water sources; increase exposure to harmful algal blooms, which are made of toxic microbes that can cause damage to the nervous system or even death; and form byproducts in drinking water from disinfection chemicals, some of which have been linked with serious human illnesses like bladder cancer. Phosphorus and nitrogen pollution come from stormwater runoff, municipal wastewater treatment, fertilization of crops and livestock manure. Nitrogen also forms from the burning of fossil fuels, like gasoline. See EPA for full


Can anyone say 'ethanol corn belt run off rule'- (ie dead zone)?


Link source Shirl Kennedy DocUticker