On average, the State of Louisiana receives about 5,000 reports of accidental hazardous materials spills annually. Most accidental releases have occurred while chemicals were being transported along major highways. Table 16 presents the number of hazardous materials spills and complaints reported to the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality by month for 2000 through 2002.
Table 16: Louisiana Hazardous Materials Complains and Spills by Month, 2000-2002.
|
Month
|
2000
|
2001
|
2002
|
Complaints
|
Spills
|
Complaints
|
Spills
|
Complaints
|
Spills
|
January
|
234
|
453
|
229
|
500
|
336
|
398
|
February
|
301
|
435
|
240
|
372
|
356
|
394
|
March
|
303
|
503
|
385
|
379
|
371
|
386
|
April
|
328
|
389
|
374
|
393
|
391
|
386
|
May
|
360
|
458
|
411
|
434
|
371
|
400
|
June
|
295
|
465
|
337
|
572
|
293
|
367
|
July
|
282
|
356
|
303
|
421
|
339
|
419
|
August
|
295
|
403
|
311
|
421
|
365
|
350
|
September
|
241
|
403
|
293
|
404
|
313
|
419
|
October
|
315
|
353
|
432
|
474
|
379
|
532
|
November
|
226
|
387
|
348
|
387
|
237
|
363
|
December
|
192
|
390
|
272
|
333
|
220
|
403
|
Total for the Year
|
3372
|
4995
|
3935
|
5029
|
3971
|
4817
|
Source: Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality, http://www.deq.state.la.us/surveillance/emergresp/complaintspillcount.htm
| 12.4Severity
The severity of a hazardous materials release depends upon the type of material released, the amount of the release, the proximity to populations or sensitive areas like wetlands or waterways. As previous hazardous materials incidents in Louisiana have shown, the release of materials can lead to injuries or evacuation of thousands of nearby residents. Nuclear releases are among the most feared of technological hazards because they can cause widespread death or long-term illness to humans and animals and contaminate the environment for decades.
Because the state’s “chemical corridor”-- the intense concentration of petrochemical plants—lies along transportation routes between New Orleans and Baton Rouge in southern Louisiana, scientists and other hazard analysts theorize that hurricane winds, storm surge, or flooding could lead to an accidental release of a hazardous material from a fixed-site or from a transport mode on one of the highways, railroads, or waterways. A professor for the Institute for Environmental Studies at Louisiana State University theorizes that airborne debris could breach pipes or tanks, floods could break tanks away from facilities, and pipelines could be ruptured by floating debris. Such releases can lead to widespread contamination of Louisiana’s coastline and to inland areas, explosions and fire, and death or injury to humans, plants, and animals.
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