For Immediate Release: Wednesday, April 1, 2020
Contact: Gail Philbin, 616-805-3063 or 312-493-2384, gail.philbin@sierraclub.org
Rebecca Wolf, 609-649-0100, rwolf@fwwatch.org
Contact: Gail Philbin, 616-805-3063 or 312-493-2384, gail.philbin@sierraclub.org
Rebecca Wolf, 609-649-0100, rwolf@fwwatch.org
Michigan’s New Factory Farm Pollution Permit Improved, but Still Flawed
Crucial issues remain unaddressed; won’t stop flow of waste
Lansing, MI – Michigan’s
new permit governing how the state’s nearly 300 factory farms manage
the millions of gallons of waste they generate for the next five years
is an improvement over previous permits, but leaves key issues
effectively unaddressed, according to Great Farms Great Lakes, a
coalition of national environmental organizations including Food &
Water Action, Sierra Club, and Public Justice.
The
Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy’s 2020
National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit for
factory farms goes into effect today, after a year of stakeholder
meetings, public input and deliberation. The Great Farms Great Lakes
Coalition encouraged over 1,200 advocates to submit comments on the
draft permit to the state, and the coalition submitted its own detailed
technical comments last December.
The
2020 NPDES Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations General Permit makes a
few long-overdue improvements such as a ban on the land application of
animal waste from January through March, but remains largely ineffective
in actually controlling water pollution related to industrial animal
agriculture. The permit ignores the science concerning polluted
watersheds and allows too many exceptions and “get-out-of-jail-free”
cards for waste application in months where the freeze-thaw cycle is
unpredictable. It also leaves the door wide open for manure-to-energy
schemes.
Of greatest concern to the coalition are these gaps in the new permit:
- The permit relies on “best management practices” such as buffer strips and vegetation rather than stricter regulations to stop the flow of nutrients from liquid manure, such as the dissolved phosphorus that drives the toxic algae blooms in Lake Erie. This ignores the reality of miles of perforated pipes known as tiles underneath farm fields that serve as direct conduits for the dissolved nutrients to nearby waterways.
- The January-March manure spreading ban still contains exceptions that allow the practice to continue at the riskiest time of year under certain conditions if “immediate incorporation” of the waste by injection takes place. Yet soil injection will only better position the waste to make its way to nearby waters via underground tiles.
- Without established standards or water quality data to back it up, the state assumes compliance with the new permit and best management practices mean a factory farm in a federally “impaired” watershed will automatically meet total maximum daily loads (TMDLs) for nutrient pollutants such as phosphorus and nitrogen.
- The permit ignores the many problems related to “manure digesters” that produce biogas energy but still leave waste and nutrients behind.
Advocates
have been pushing for years for a complete ban on the application of
waste on frozen and snow-covered ground in Michigan as well as
compliance with the US EPA’s TMDLs for pollutants allowed in designated
“impaired waters,” and an end to the questionable practice of factory
farm biogas production. EGLE’s stakeholder and public hearing process
for the new permit held promise that Michigan would turn a corner with
changes in the permit that would finally meaningfully address the
nutrient pollution from animal agriculture that plagues our inland
waters and Great Lakes. Unfortunately, the 2020 permit fails to
guarantee that factory farms will not further impair Michigan’s waters.
Statements from Members of the Great Farms Great Lakes Coalition:
Gail Philbin, Director of the Michigan Sierra Club:
“After more than two decades of battling factory farm pollution in Michigan, we were encouraged by the changes proposed during the permit stakeholder and public comment process to address the huge environmental and health problems caused by large-scale livestock facilities. However, the limited steps taken in the final permit fall short of what's needed and represent a missed opportunity to add real protections to seriously address current water quality issues and set us on a course for a better environmental and economic future."
Food & Water Action Senior Organizer Rebecca Wolf:
“While this permit is a testament to the power of people coming together and holding polluters accountable, it needed to create full protections from the most egregious forms of manure pollution. EGLE has clearly missed this opportunity, and we will continue to urge Governor Whitmer and the state legislature to take immediate and comprehensive action on factory farm pollution. This is a critical moment for the future of Lake Erie and Michigan’s waters. We’ll continue to demand a future of sustainable, pasture-based family farming--where Michigan is leading the way.”
Jessica Culpepper, Director of Public Justice’s Food Project:
“A set of regulations that leaves the door open for factory farms applying any manure in winter is not a full commitment to the health and well-being of Michiganders. Likewise, it is disappointing that factory farm biogas - a false climate solution designed to entrench the current food system at the expense of independent producers and rural communities - is not rejected outright by Michigan’s government.”
“A set of regulations that leaves the door open for factory farms applying any manure in winter is not a full commitment to the health and well-being of Michiganders. Likewise, it is disappointing that factory farm biogas - a false climate solution designed to entrench the current food system at the expense of independent producers and rural communities - is not rejected outright by Michigan’s government.”
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