Dredging in Hudson River Nears Completion

June 23, 2015

 After six years of digging, General Electric Co. expects to finish this year removing some 2.7 million cubic yards of contaminated river sediment in upper Hudson River in Waterford under its landmark Superfund agreement with the federal Environmental Protection Agency.

 
AP reports that long after the last barge dredging toxins from the bottom of the upper Hudson River moves on, scientists will track the slow fade in contamination levels.
 
General Electric expects to remove enough sediment to fill two Empire State Buildings, but environmental advocates say without more work, 40 percent of the PCBs will be left in the river.
 
After six years of digging, crews will have removed most of the PCBs on the river bottom discharged decades ago from two GE plants upriver.
 
The 315-mile Hudson River is steeped in American history. It guided Henry Hudson in search of a northwest passage and served commerce as a transportation route during the Industrial Revolution.
 

Logistics News

Puerto Rico Inks LNG Contract with New Fortress Energy

Puerto Rico Inks LNG Contract with New Fortress Energy

Panama Canal Unveils Decade Roadmap of Transformation

Panama Canal Unveils Decade Roadmap of Transformation

Nissen Kaiun Becomes Stakeholder in Econowind

Nissen Kaiun Becomes Stakeholder in Econowind

China's Hold on Global Ports focus of Trump Administration

China's Hold on Global Ports focus of Trump Administration

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Trump names board to mediate New York rail dispute
Nigerian FOB levies on imports are suspended after industry protest
Sources say that the Permian pipelines of Plains All American in Texas are facing quality problems.