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Topic started on 19-11-2005 @ 11:58 PM by makeitso
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VX, the most toxic nerve agent known, is being treated, then dumped into the Deleware river at a New Jersey Du Pont facility.
The 250,000 gallons of liquid VX is being mixed with a solution of water, and caustic sodium hydroxide. Then the dangerous liquid is then
transported 760 miles from the Indiana facility to New Jersey, where it undergoes further treatment at the Du Pont facility, who then dumps it into
the Delaware river.
I am afraid.
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reply to this post:
copyright & usage
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reply posted on 20-11-2005 @ 12:00 AM by makeitso
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VX a liquid the consistency of motor oil, is the deadliest nerve agent ever made. Just 1 drop
can kill - making it 170 times deadlier than sarin. The only known countries to possess VX are U.S. France and Russia.
VX gas was developed in the Porton Down Chemical Weapons Research Centre, Wiltshire, England in.
The British traded the technology of VX with the United States of America for information on thermonuclear weapons.
During the 1950s the E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Company manufactured heavy water at Newport Indiana. In 1961the U.S. Army contracted
FMC Corporation to produce liquid VX at the Newport Indiana Chemical Depot
70 miles west of Indianapolis. Munitions such as land mines, spray tanks and rockets were shipped to Newport by rail, filled with chemical agent, then
shipped to U.S. Defense sites worldwide. Production was stopped in 1969 after which the stockpile was left to rust under guard.
A treaty that the U.S. signed with the U.N organization, ( The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons),
became in force as of April 29, 1997. The teaty requires the destruction of chemical weapons by the year 2007.
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copyright & usage
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reply posted on 20-11-2005 @ 12:02 AM by makeitso
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On February 18, 1999, the Army awarded the $295 million contract to Parsons Infrastructure and Technology Group, Inc., and its partnership team headed
by AlliedSignal to complete the facility design; build, operate and close the disposal facility. Within a year, construction was scheduled to begin on
this new facility that will destroy 1,269 tons of liquid VX stored in carbon steel ton containers.
Testing was done, and it was finally agreed that Mason & Hanger Corporation ,
( who is known for the large fines and penalties it receives from
breaking the rules) would use a method of treatment and distruction which consists of adding the agent to a solution of water and heated sodium
hydroxide, a highly caustic liquid. The resulting reaction neutralizes the VX and creates a corrosive byproduct called hydrolysate. Four million
gallons of hydrolysate are expected to be created over the course of neutralizing the entire stockpile. The Caustic “Wastewater” will be held
until the Du Pont Company is ready to take control for the next step in the neutralization process.
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reply posted on 20-11-2005 @ 12:04 AM by makeitso
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This does not mean that the VX hydrolysate will not contain any VX. The
detectable limit being used by the Army is 20 ppb, therefore the Army will allow VX nerve agent to be shipped off site and to New Jersey as long as
the VX in the hydrolysate is less than 20 ppb.
According to an Ohio EPA study, VX at a level of 20 ppb after 17.4 hours killed half of the striped bass exposed. As a result of this and numerous
other concerns, an agency toxicologist “strongly recommended” against discharge of treated VX hydrolysate into the local POTW and waterbody until
there was “more information about the possible toxic effects of the treated hydrolysate discharge on aquatic life”. (Interoffice Memo from John F.
Estenik, DSW, Toxics Advisor, Subject Treated VX Hydrolysate Discharge Recommendation Technical Report, October 10, 2003, Ohio EPA)
Further, in an August 26, 2003 article in Chemical & Engineering News (“Destroying Chemical Weapons, Army’s Problem-Plagued Program More Costly
than Originally Planned”, Lois R. Ember) Terry Arthur, a Newport spokeswoman said that while the Army committed not to ship VX hydrolysate off-site
unless the VX levels were less than 20 ppb, it couldn’t now honor such a commitment. She went on to say, “As measured, caustic neutralization
produces a hydrolysate containing 40 to 80 ppb of VX.”
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reply posted on 20-11-2005 @ 12:07 AM by makeitso
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In the next step, the neutralized VX would be loaded into hazardous materials tanker trucks for the 760-mile trip to a New Jersey Du Pont facility for
“further” treatment. Upon completion, the VX “wastewater” will be dumped
into the Delaware river. A move the CDC warns raises concerns and questions about potential impacts on public health and the environment.
Despite public outcry, CDC, and academic warnings, after testing Congress
was notified that the neutralization process was ready, and workers began chemically “neutralizing” 1,269 tons of VX nerve agent in May 2005.
“Neutralizing” all the VX should take about 2 ½ years it was announced.
The Oct. 29, 2005 A gasket failure caused 490 gallons of caustic
wastewater to spill at the Newport Indiana facility. But not to worry, officials say there was no cause for alarm. The spill was cleaned up,
the gaskets changed, and now neutralization is underway again, as of today Saturday Nov. 20, 2005.
Be Afraid.
References:
hosted.ap.org...
www.globalsecurity.org...
www.globalsecurity.org...
www.google.com...
maps.google.com...,-87.424479&spn=0.007574,0.020385&t=h&hl=en
www.google.com...
www.3dchem.com...#
www.delawareriverkeeper.org...
www.nap.edu...
[edit on 11/20/05 by makeitso]
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reply posted on 20-11-2005 @ 12:31 AM by makeitso
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As additional information, it should be emphasized that the CDC was not very happy about the dumping of the mix into the Delaware river.
CDC Report
The Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) analysis indicates that the DuPont risk assessment does not contain adequate information to
determine that the aquatic ecologic risk from the discharge of treated CVXH to the Delaware River is acceptable. Further, the EPA expressed concerns
that the 20 ppb clearance criterion for VX in CVXH is based “solely on the protection of humans from a drinking water source and may not be
protective of aquatic organisms through ingestion or dermal exposure.”
Consequently, CDC cannot recommend proceeding with the treatment and disposal at the DuPont SET facility until EPA’s noted deficiencies are
addressed

In addition, the dumping will go on despite The full Delaware House of Representatives passing Senate Concurrent
Resolution 32, opposing the shipment of VX nerve poison wastes to the Delaware Valley
and urging treatment in Newport, Indiana, by a unanimous voice vote at 3:39 on April 8, 2004. Discussion was not considered necessary.
Despite this and other public outcry, the Army seems determined to have Du Pont dump the chemical in the Delaware River.
The budget for the Newport Site remains at the 1.1 billion dollar.
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reply posted on 20-11-2005 @ 05:14 AM by therainmaker
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Wow, I just happen to come across something relevant that shocked me recently, apparently they are still dumping a variety of things, or at least it
is not unheard of.
Check out this link:
www.drms.dla.mil...##A
Read about condition D:
"MLI(SME). Total destruction of item and components so as to preclude restoration or repair...(As an alternate, burial or deep water dumping may be
used when coordinated with the DOD Demilitarization Program Office.)"
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reply posted on 20-11-2005 @ 08:31 AM by makeitso
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Wow, I just happen to come across something relevant that shocked me recently, apparently they are still dumping a variety of things, or at least it
is not unheard of.

You are right. It is not unheard of. Earlier this month The Daily Press in Newport News, Va., reported that the Army extensively disposed of nerve
and mustard agents in the nation's oceans, including off New Jersey's coast, between World War II and the early 1970s.
The army confirmed the report.
www.courierpostonline.com.../20051104/OPINION/511040326/1046
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