Posted on 06/10/2004 12:52:53 PM PDT by erikm88
NEWPORT, Ind. (AP) - In a cavernous, pipe-filled structure known simply as the Utility Building, Army contractors are getting ready to destroy a Cold War-era concoction so lethal it could kill untold millions.
After years of controversy, workers will begin chemically neutralizing 1,269 tons of the ultra-deadly nerve agent VX this summer as part of a plan to eliminate the nations chemical weapons stockpile.
Residents near the Newport Chemical Depot are ready to see the VX go. So are activists who keep tabs on the nations cache of weapons of mass destruction.
"One drop the size of George Washingtons eye on a quarter is enough to kill a healthy, 180-pound male. Its the most lethal chemical on the planet," said Craig Williams, director of the Chemical Weapons Working Group, a Kentucky-based watchdog organization.
But a dispute over what will become of the projects wastewater could leave the rural community about 70 miles west of Indianapolis stuck with the nerve agents legacy.
Opposition from Dayton, Ohio, residents scuttled the Armys plan to dispose of up to 4 million gallons of nerve agent wastewater, or hydrolysate, at a plant there. Now, plans to truck the waste to Deepwater, N.J., for treatment and disposal at a DuPont Co. plant are in doubt amid opposition in New Jersey and Delaware.
The Army plans to heat the VX, a liquid with the consistency of mineral oil, in chemical reactors to destroy its structure. Army officials liken the resulting hydrolysate to liquid drain cleaner, and say it will contain no detectable VX at sampling levels of 20 parts per billion.
Although VX was never used by the U.S. military in combat, there have been human exposures - but no deaths - in the United States. Its lethal potential was demonstrated in 1968 when an aerial spraying test of VX at Utahs Dugway Proving Grounds went awry, killing about 6,000 grazing sheep.
The VX stockpile was produced at the 7,000-acre Newport complex between 1961 and 1968 as a doomsday deterrent. For years after production ended, containers of the nerve agent sat rusting in a field, apparently regarded by the depots workers as just part of the landscape.
"They used to eat lunch on top of the containers," said Lt. Col. Joseph Marquart, Newports commander. "We dont do that anymore."
The containers now sit in heavily guarded concrete bunkers built after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
Since President Richard Nixon halted the manufacture of chemical weapons in 1969, about 31,000 tons of VX, sarin and mustard nerve agent have been stored at Newport and seven other chemical depots in Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Kentucky, Maryland, Oregon and Utah.
Destruction is under way at four of the eight in compliance with the international Chemical Weapons Convention treaty.
At the Newport depot, Army contractors will open the first of 1,690 VX-filled steel containers late this summer inside a building from which no air escapes without being heavily filtered. Security cameras keep watch, and air monitoring equipment scans for trouble.
Inside, workers will drain the 6½-by-3-foot containers in airtight glovebox chambers, with technicians outside the reinforced glass using thick gloves to attach a special pumping device.
The VX will then be transferred to a steel reactor where it will be neutralized by adding it over a 36-minute period to a mixture of water and sodium hydroxide heated to about 195 degrees. Two sets of paddles will agitate the mixture to complete the reaction.
DuPont wants to dump treated hydrolysate into the Delaware River. But fears that the chemical could ruin decades of river cleanup led Delaware Gov. Ruth Ann Minner and New Jersey Gov. James McGreevey to send the Army a letter of protest.
DuPont spokesman Anthony Farina said the company will not accept an Army contract to handle the hydrolysate until the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Environmental Protection Agency complete studies of DuPonts plans.
Because of the uncertainties, the Army intends to buy 50 5,000-gallon tanks that will allow it to store at Newport about 240,000 gallons of hydrolysate.
Sara Morgan, a teacher who lives a few miles from the depot, is glad the neutralization will soon begin. She led a campaign that forced the Army to drop its original plans to incinerate Newports VX, a method some feared could release toxins into the air.
Yet she believes the projects waste should stay at Newport - not sent off to become New Jersey and Delawares problem.
"The citizens of the area where this is going to be treated should be accepting of it," she said. "I dont think it should be shoved down their throats."
Why not just drop it over Pyongyang.......2 problems solved at one time!...........
I'd vote for Tehran and Demascus actually...
"DuPont wants to dump treated hydrolysate into the Delaware River."
I'm not a wacko-environmentalist but this is an obvious case of uneccesarilly polluting a waterway. After all the environmental fuss the last 30 years you think DuPont would have a little more sense. And you think that a case like this would bring out the enviro protestors...where are they?
I didn't say what part of the Delaware.
Of course, the Hudson River near Chappaqua might be a better idea...
Iran could be solved by arming the rebels.
"I" should read "IT" instead.
*grr*
I really should pay attention to what I'm typing rather than holding side conversation and FReeping at the same time..
Don't Freep without your mind full........
Figured that. And I'll watch out for those possessed poultrys!
Well, some of the funniest things posted or said in forum have been typed whiile the posters were distracted.
LOL!
The conversation on my end that ahd me distracted was almost as asurreal as my tagline.
Of course.. if I really had some hydrolysate to dump I know where I shall dump it.
There's a nice taxpayer rip-off place not 57 miles from me inhabited byone ogre...
There are several left-wing groups-some of whom sell "bio-chemical protective equipment"-and some of whom would PREFER that the US maintain an increasingly dangerous stockpile,who have delayed this process for years with frivilous lawsuits.
I thought all the VX had alredy been sent to Johonson Atoll and destroyed?
Look at all the fuss, and the technology required to destroy this stuff.
And we are supposed to think that Iraq secretly destroyed their stock of sarin and tabun without anyone knowing, or us finding the plant when they were done?
2- I seriously doubt that Saddam could bear to see 'good' WMD wasted and destroyed. That's not like him. It's still somewhere.
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