Indiana released a chemical soup of toxins into the environment last year — 133 million pounds of them, to be exact. The amount is the equivalent weight of roughly 950,000 American adults, or the population of Marion County, and made Indiana sixth in the country in terms of toxic release.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency requires large industrial facilities to report their toxic releases into the environment every year. Priceonomics, a group that analyzes and shares data, worked with one of their customers to examine the EPA’s Toxic Releases Inventory and its recently added 2016 data. That customer, Ode, creates environmentally conscious cleaning products.
Editor’s note: a different video appears with the original story; see the link below to that source.
With a handful of the nation’s most toxin-producing companies in Hoosiers’ backyards, it may come as no surprise that Indiana and several of its cities and counties near the tops of lists for their chemical releases. Here’s what you need to know: • Indiana released more toxic chemicals into the environment in […]
Full article: Danger zone: Indiana produces 6th most toxic chemicals in U.S.A.
About the water in Indiana:
U.S. Supreme Court won’t change Indiana ruling: Lake Michigan’s shoreline belongs to all Hoosiers
Urban gardeners use big ag techniques to conserve soil
New Tests Reveal 15 out of 15 of Indiana’s Coal Ash Ponds Are Leaking
Charbonneau: The future of water policy in Indiana
Groundwater Monitoring Reveals Widespread Radioactivity at Duke Energy Coal Plants