PennEnvironment, Three Rivers Waterkeeper Sue Styropek USA To Stop Plastic Pollution In Raccoon Creek, Ohio River In Beaver County
Photo

On December 5, PennEnvironment and Three Rivers Waterkeeper announced they have filed a federal lawsuit against BVPV Styrenics LLC and its parent company, Styropek USA, Inc., for alleged violations of the federal Clean Water Act involving illegal discharges of plastics from their plastic manufacturing facility in Monaca, Beaver County. 

“Whether we reach a negotiated settlement or a litigated solution, our goal in this case is the same:  to end the illegal discharge of harmful plastic pollution into Raccoon Creek, the Ohio River and our environment,” said David Masur, PennEnvironment’s executive director.  “Our right as private citizens and citizen groups to directly enforce the federal Clean Water Act against violators is a critical tool we can use to achieve that goal.”    

PennEnvironment and Three Rivers Waterkeeper, two nonprofit environmental groups, allege in their complaint that the Styropek facility located at the confluence of Raccoon Creek and the Ohio River discharges wastewater and stormwater that is routinely filled with tiny plastic beads, called “nurdles,” that the plant manufactures in vast numbers.

The lawsuit claims that federal law prohibits these discharges.

The Styropek facility is located approximately 20 miles downstream from Pittsburgh and annually produces as much as 123,000 tons of these expandable polystyrene nurdles, each just 3 millimeters or less in diameter.

They are later expanded and molded at other facilities into familiar products such as Styrofoam.

“The discharge of microplastics into our waters is an immediate and growing problem right here in western Pennsylvania, posing threats to aquatic life and potentially even to people,” explained Heather Hulton VanTassel, executive director of Three Rivers Waterkeeper, which first discovered and documented Styropek’s illegal discharges. “While we are open to discussing a negotiated resolution of Styropek’s violations, we will not shy from our intent to hold the company fully accountable for its ongoing violations of the Clean Water Act.”

The environmental groups say a settlement could potentially end the legal proceedings more quickly because the companies have said they want to avoid litigation in favor of negotiation — a stance the groups applaud.

The groups have already had communications regarding the violations alleged in the complaint with representatives of the companies and with the Department of Environmental Protection, and intend to explore every opportunity to reach a speedy resolution that will ensure the immediate and long-term health of the affected water bodies.

As part of Three Rivers Waterkeeper’s efforts to curb plastic pollution in the region, the group has teamed with the Mountain Watershed Association to conduct monthly “nurdle patrols” of the Ohio River.

Since September 2022, patrols have found significant numbers of the tiny plastic beads, or nurdles, and traced them to Raccoon Creek and the wastewater outfalls at the Styropek facility, where they accumulate in the water and on vegetation, creek banks and river sediment. DEP and Styropek’s own consultant have corroborated these findings.    

The groups’ lawsuit alleges that any discharge of nurdles violates the Clean Water Act because the company’s wastewater and stormwater discharge permit does not authorize the release of the plastic pellets.

In addition, the groups allege that the accumulation of nurdles in the water and along creek banks violates two permit conditions designed to protect water quality from floating solids and from substances inimical to aquatic life.

The facility in Monaca is one of several owned by Styropek USA, Inc., and is immediately downstream of the recently opened Shell Polymers Plant in an area full of plastics manufacturers.

Along with its foreign affiliates, Styropek USA, Inc. identifies itself as the “largest EPS producer in the American Continent” with “the largest distribution network in America.”

Under the federal Clean Water Act’s citizen suit provision, private citizens affected by violations of the law are allowed to bring an enforcement action against the violator in federal court after providing 60 days’ notice of the violations to the violator and to state and federal environmental agencies.

In this case, the plaintiffs filed their notice of intent on October 3, 2023. Citizens can seek civil penalties and a court order requiring the violator to comply with the law and remediate the harm caused by its violations.

Click Here for a copy of the lawsuit.

(Photo: Plastic nurdles, The Allegheny Front.)

NewsClips:

-- TribLive: Lawsuit Alleges Federal Clean Water Act Violations From Beaver County Plastics Manufacturer

-- Beaver County Times: Lawsuit Claims Styropek Polluted Beaver County Waterways

-- Post-Gazette: Local Environmental Groups File Federal Lawsuit Against Plastics Manufacturer In Beaver County

PA Oil & Gas Industry Public Notice Dashboards:

-- PA Oil & Gas Weekly Compliance Dashboard - Dec. 2 to 8 -- 9 Abandoned Conventional Wells; Failure To Restore Shale Gas Pad; No Progress In Spill Cleanups  [PaEN]

-- PA Oil & Gas Industrial Facilities: Permit Notices/Opportunities To Comment - December 9  [PaEN]

-- DEP Sets Jan. 23 Hearing On Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Frazer Compressor Station In Chester County  [PaEN]

-- DEP Posted 68 Pages Of Permit-Related Notices In December 9 PA Bulletin  [PaEN]

Related Articles:

-- Marcellus Drilling News: Senate Republican Leaders Urge DEP To Withdraw Environmental Justice Policy Saying They Lack Statutory Authority, And Out-of-State Groups Not Actual Residents Express EJ Concerns  [PaEN]

-- PA Business Report: Senate Republicans Urge DEP To Withdraw Updated Environmental Justice Policy

-- DEP Expects $44 Million To Plug Conventional Wells Leaking Methane; $76 Million For 2nd Year Of Federal Conventional Abandoned Well Plugging Program  [PaEN]

-- DEP Plugs 132 Abandoned Conventional Oil & Gas Wells So Far;  DEP Issued 499 NOVs For New Conventional Well Abandonments So Far In 2023  [PaEN]

-- Roulette Oil & Gas LLC Withdraws Oil & Gas Wastewater Injection Well Application In Potter County  [PaEN]

-- Independent Fiscal Office Reports 3rd Quarter Natural Gas Production Down 0.5% Over 3rd Quarter 2022, But Increased Over Last 12 Months  [PaEN]

-- PA Senate Hearing Focuses On Minimizing Risk And Harm In Development Of PA’s Hydrogen Infrastructure  [PaEN]

-- House Environmental Committee To Hold Dec. 11 Hearing On Bill To Expand Renewable Energy Mandates In Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards  [PaEN]

-- Hydrogen Tax Credit Changes, Riparian Buffers, Light Pollution On House Environmental Committee Agenda For Dec. 13  [PaEN]

-- PennEnvironment, Three Rivers Waterkeeper Sue Styropek USA To Stop Plastic Pollution In Raccoon Creek, Ohio River In Beaver County  [PaEN]

-- Susquehanna River Basin Commission: Low Stream Flows Trigger Shutdown Of 4 Shale Gas Drilling Water Withdrawals In Bradford, Tioga County  [PaEN]

NewsClips:

-- TribLive: MAX Environmental Yukon Hazardous Waste Landfill Could Pay $275,000 To Settle Pollution Claims In Class Action Lawsuit By Residents  [75% Of Waste Comes From Shale Gas Industry]

-- TribLive: Natural Gas Smell Causes Evacuation At Plum Boro Middle School, Allegheny County  [Plum Boro Natural Gas Home Explosion Killed 6 People In August] 

-- The Derrick Editorial: Reliable Power Means Shoring Up Natural Gas Infrastructure

-- EQT Joins The Oil & Gas Decarbonization Charter To Reduce Methane Emissions

-- TribLive: Murrysville Council OKs Lease For Gas, Oil Rights Under 2 Public Parks

-- Scranton Times: Landfill Gas Processing Plant Holds Public Information Session In Throop About Storing Carbon Dioxide Deep Underground

-- The Center Square - Anthony Hennen: Concerns Grow Over Perceived Viability Of Hydrogen Hubs

-- PA Capital-Star: Hydrogen Hubs Face Scrutiny At PA Senate Dems Hearing

-- Williamsport Sun Guest Essay: Hydrogen Hubs Won’t Create Jobs - By Commonwealth Foundation

-- TribLive: Rain Fails To Ease Concerns Over Falling Water Level At Beaver Run Reservoir In Westmoreland

-- The Center Square - Anthony Hennen: PA May See Biggest Drop In Decade For New Shale Gas Wells

-- TribLive: Southwest PA Enjoying Low Natural Gas Prices After Large Drop From Last Year

-- Tribune-Democrat: Peoples Gas Says Credit Offsets 149% Natural Gas Price Hike

-- Interfaith Partners For The Chesapeake Bay: Dec. 7 Screening Of ‘A Plastic Wave’ - How To Reduce Your Plastic Waste, 7:00 p.m.

-- The Allegheny Front: Lawsuit Claims Ohio Approvals To Frack State Lands Violated Law

-- Inside Climate News: Massachusetts Public Utilities Agency Sets Framework For Reducing Natural Gas Use For Heating

-- Inside Climate News: From Fracked Gas In PA To Toxic Waste In Texas, Tracking Vinyl Chloride Production In The US

-- Bloomberg: Europe’s Winter Natural Gas Price Slump Shifts Focus To Summer Storage

[Posted: December 6, 2023]


12/11/2023

Go To Preceding Article     Go To Next Article

Return to This PA Environment Digest's Main Page