Call me crazy, but I am a dyed flaming redheaded conservative, alternative rock-loving, tattooed, Sinead O'Connor fan who knows every song from the '50's and '60's, and card carrying member of the Republican party.
Published on December 2, 2004 By iamheather In Current Events
The EPA must put a stop to Mother Nature. She is polluting our air with little concern for animals, insects, and other fragile lifeforms. Mother Nature must be regulated!


Mount St. Helens Is State's Top Polluter

Thu Dec 2, 3:32 AM ET

SEATTLE - Washington state's top polluter isn't a pulp mill, a power plant or refinery. It's the newly awakened Mount St. Helens.

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Since the volcano began erupting in early October, it has been pumping out 50 to 250 tons a day of sulfur dioxide, the lung-stinging gas that causes acid rain and contributes to haze. At peak, that's more than double the amount from all the state's industries combined.


Normally, the state's No. 1 polluter is a coal-fired power plant owned by the Canadian firm TransAlta. The plant churned out 200 tons a day of sulfur dioxide until regulators demanded $250 million worth of renovations, bringing the level down to 27 tons a day.


Tough to get those kind of results from a volcano.


"You can't put a cork in it," said Greg Nothstein of the Washington Energy Policy Office.


Because the area around St. Helens is so sparsely populated, officials say they haven't heard complaints about respiratory problems linked to the emissions. But people with breathing ailments probably would feel the effects if they lived close to it, said Bob Elliott, executive director of the Southwest Clean Air Agency.


"We are very fortunate, in terms of the impact on human health, that Mount St. Helens is pretty remote," Elliott said.


Worldwide, sulfur dioxide emissions from volcanoes add up to about 15 million tons a year, compared to the 200 million tons produced by power plants and other human activities.







Comments
on Dec 02, 2004
We can't exactly stop nature, now can we? And if we did then what? Nature might turn around and take away our sunlight, or drinking water, or what not. We need it alot more then it needs us
on Dec 02, 2004
Yeah, Danny. This was my lame attempt at satirical humor.
on Dec 02, 2004
Well I thought it was funny.
on Dec 02, 2004
Well I thought it was funny.


I am so sorry you share my sarcastic sense of humor, but I am also glad that you do.
on Dec 02, 2004
So your sorry your glad or your glad your sorry?
on Dec 02, 2004
When elections were still fun up here (and people turned out to vote), joke parties like the Rhinos would offer up platform tidbits like:

"If elected we would get rid of the environment: it's too big and it's always getting dirty."
on Dec 02, 2004
When elections were still fun up here (and people turned out to vote), joke parties like the Rhinos would offer up platform tidbits like:

"If elected we would get rid of the environment: it's too big and it's always getting dirty."


sunwukong
on Dec 02, 2004
I flew right by Mt. St. Helens during it's first series of eruptions back in October. ( i was flying into Portland, and they re-directed the plane to go around it because of the steam/smooke cloud being in our flightpath) I just kept remembering when i was a kid and when it went off in 1980. I was 700 miles away and there was dust all over everything two days after the eruption.


on Dec 02, 2004
I flew right by Mt. St. Helens during it's first series of eruptions back in October. ( i was flying into Portland, and they re-directed the plane to go around it because of the steam/smooke cloud being in our flightpath) I just kept remembering when i was a kid and when it went off in 1980. I was 700 miles away and there was dust all over everything two days after the eruption.


Wow, that must have been an amazing site from the air. I guess I never really considered all the dust and pollution that a volcano creates. Most of us ignorant southerners only see 'em on TV.
on Dec 06, 2004
It is entertaining (to say the least) to hear enviro-wackos whine, complain and moan about all the ways we have found to destroy nature. First of all, every poison or element we stuff into a warhead was first developed by Mother Nature in the folds of the earth's crust.

Match any of our weapons, smoke stacks, exhaust pipes and oil spills against the Mother Nature's track record of volcano erruptions, hurricanes, floods, blizzards, tornadoes and other natural disasters, it is my experience that we are merely amatuers against the master!!!
on Dec 06, 2004
I flew right by Mt. St. Helens during it's first series of eruptions back in October. ( i was flying into Portland, and they re-directed the plane to go around it because of the steam/smooke cloud being in our flightpath) I just kept remembering when i was a kid and when it went off in 1980. I was 700 miles away and there was dust all over everything two days after the eruption.


Get this, I was in Iraq and there was dust all over everything there too, and that was 10 years later!!!! lol
on Dec 06, 2004
It is entertaining (to say the least) to hear enviro-wackos whine, complain and moan about all the ways we have found to destroy nature


Yes it is. Highly entertaining!

Get this, I was in Iraq and there was dust all over everything there too, and that was 10 years later!!!! lol