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VERMONT COMPANIES REDUCE THEIR 1997 TOXIC RELEASES BY 18% SINCE 1995; EPA NAMES FIVE LARGEST POLLUTION EMITTERS

Release Date: 05/13/1999
Contact Information: Amy Miller, EPA Press Office (617-918-1042) Dwight Peavey, EPA TRI Coordinator (617-918-1829) Jim Phillips, EPA TRI Data Analyst (617-918-1832)

BOSTON - Manufacturers in Vermont reduced the amount of toxic pollutants released into the air, land and water by 18 percent between 1995 and 1997, according to data issued today by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

The reduction in the amount of pollution going into Vermont's environment far outpaces the 1 percent reduction in environmental releases recorded nationally during the same two years, according to EPA's New England Office. From 1995 to 1997, the most recent year for which numbers are available, New England as a whole reported a 20 percent reduction in environmental releases.

"The continued reductions in pollution emissions once again prove that most Vermont businesses have a strong environmental ethic," said John P. DeVillars, EPA's New England Administrator. "We are showing the nation that the Vermont and New England economies can grow at the same time pollution is being reduced. Companies across the region are proving that smart environmental practices equal smart business practices."

"I am very pleased with the clear, continuing commitment by Vermont industries to the reduction in the use and release of toxics," said Canute E. Dalmasse, Vermont Commissioner of Environmental Conservation. "These recent reductions are particularly impressive, since reductions are more difficult to achieve now than at the beginning of the program. Vermont industries are obviously sustaining their efforts to reduce toxics in the environment."

Beginning in 1995, manufacturers were required to send pollutant information to EPA's Toxics Release Inventory for 650 toxic chemicals and chemical categories of toxics that were both released at the company's facility and transported to disposal facilities off site. A review of the most recent data shows that Vermont's industries have reduced their on- and off-site pollution from 690,247 pounds in 1995 to just 566,695 pounds in 1997 (the last year for which data is available).

Since 1988, companies have been required to report the release of 320 chemicals at the site of the company. Based on these reporting requirements, Vermont manufacturers reduced the amount of toxics released into the air, water and land by 89.7 percent between 1988 and 1997, which compares to a 49.2% reduction nationally.

The following is a list of Vermont's five largest on-site emitters of toxic chemicals. It is important to note that these chemical emissions are reported to EPA under the TRI and do not reflect illegal discharges of pollutants to the environment.

COMPANY NAMEADDRESSTOTAL # POUNDS emitted on site
IBM Essex Junction 199,180
Ethan Allen Inc.Orleans 41,695
Fibermark Office Products Brattleboro 37,511
Mylan Labs Inc.Saint Albans 17,821
Ethan Allen Inc.Beecher Falls 16,739

The 1997 TRI data also shows that of Vermont's 4 million pounds of toxic wastes, 2.2 million pounds (55 percent) were recycled, 0.022 million pounds (1 percent) were used for energy recovery, 1.262 million pounds (31 percent) were treated before disposal and 0.57 million pounds (13 percent) were released at on- or off-site locations.

"The size and scope of our assistance and pollution prevention programs are paying off," DeVillars said. "We are seeing the results in cleaner industries and a healthier environment."

The reporting of data to the Toxics Release Inventory is required under the federal Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act, passed in 1986. The TRI provides the amount, location and type of release to the environment -- whether a pollutant is emitted into the air, discharged into the water, or released onto the land. It also includes information on waste shipped off-site for disposal or further treatment. The TRI has been credited with arming communities with valuable knowledge and encouraging facilities to reduce their releases of toxic chemicals into the environment through source reduction, or pollution prevention, measures.

TRI information is easily accessible to the news media and to the public. Information is available on-line, HTTP://WWW.EPA.GOV/OPPTINTR/TRI, in hard copy and in a variety of computer formats, including CD-ROM. For copies or more information, the public is encouraged to call EPA's toll-free Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Information Hotline at 1(800) 424-9346.