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EPA fines Xcel Energy-Colorado nearly $1 million for handling of coal ash at power plant

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Xcel Energy-Colorado is facing a $925,000 penalty by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for not complying with regulations on the disposal of coal ash and not properly monitoring groundwater at a power plant in Pueblo.

The EPA said in a statement that Xcel Energy has agreed to address groundwater contamination at the Comanche coal-fired power plant and ensure the proper closure of impoundments holding the waste.

The settlement was approved last week by the judicial officer for the EPA Region 8 office in Denver. The EPA said Xcel Energy didn’t:

  • Monitor groundwater under the plant and prepare reports on corrective actions.
  • Conduct statistical analysis of groundwater data and establish background contaminant concentrations.
  • Stop using an impoundment when it was supposed to.
  • Provide access to documents that were required to be posted on a publicly accessible website.

Coal ash, the solids left from burning coal in power plants, can contain harmful levels of contaminants such as mercury, cadmium, and arsenic, according to the EPA. The agency approved its first regulations for disposal of the waste in 2015.

Cobalt and molybdenum have been detected in wells on the plant site, EPA spokeswoman Melissa Sullivan said Tuesday in an email. There have been no confirmed effects on off-site drinking water, she said.

Sullivan said Xcel Energy was out of compliance with the rules since Oct. 17, 2017.



Xcel Energy-Colorado is facing a $925,000 penalty by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for not complying with regulations on the disposal of coal ash and not properly monitoring groundwater at a power plant in Pueblo.

The EPA said in a statement that Xcel Energy has agreed to address groundwater contamination at the Comanche coal-fired power plant and ensure the proper closure of impoundments holding the waste.

The settlement was approved last week by the judicial officer for the EPA Region 8 office in Denver. The EPA said Xcel Energy didn’t:

  • Monitor groundwater under the plant and prepare reports on corrective actions.
  • Conduct statistical analysis of groundwater data and establish background contaminant concentrations.
  • Stop using an impoundment when it was supposed to.
  • Provide access to documents that were required to be posted on a publicly accessible website.

Coal ash, the solids left from burning coal in power plants, can contain harmful levels of contaminants such as mercury, cadmium, and arsenic, according to the EPA. The agency approved its first regulations for disposal of the waste in 2015.

Cobalt and molybdenum have been detected in wells on the plant site, EPA spokeswoman Melissa Sullivan said Tuesday in an email. There have been no confirmed effects on off-site drinking water, she said.

Sullivan said Xcel Energy was out of compliance with the rules since Oct. 17, 2017.

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