Tuesday

An Old Steel Mill Retools to Produce Clean Energy



Doug Benz for The New York Times

Windmills at Steel Winds dot the site of the old Bethlehem Steel mill in Lackawanna, N.Y. The wind farm is the largest to be built in a city.

The road from Buffalo to this city to the south offers a stark reminder of the region’s faded past as a hub of industry and shipping.

Yet in the past few months, a different sight has emerged on the 2.2-mile shoreline above a labyrinth of pipes, blackened buildings and crumbling coke ovens that was once home to a behemoth Bethlehem Steel plant: eight gleaming white windmills with 153-foot blades slowly turning in the wind off Lake Erie, on a former Superfund site where iron and steel slag and other industrial waste were dumped during 80 years of production.

"It’s changing the image of the city of Lackawanna," said Norman L. Polanski Jr., the city’s mayor and a former Bethlehem worker who lost his job when the company stopped making steel here in 1983. "We were the old Rust Belt, with all the negatives. Right now, we are progressive and we are leading the way on the waterfront."

Christine Real de Azua, of the American Wind Energy Association, said Steel Winds, as this wind farm is known, is the largest to rise in a city, and according to the state Department of Environmental Conservation, it is the first to rise on land overseen by New York’s brownfields program. (Brownfields are low-level toxic waste sites concentrated mainly around abandoned factories.)

"It’s a way to convert the Rust Belt to the Wind Belt," Ms. Real de Azua said.
The turbines, owned jointly by BQ Energy of Pawling, N.Y., and UPC Wind of Newton, Mass., are able to produce a total of 20 megawatts of electricity a year, enough to provide power to 7,000 homes, said the project manager, Mark Mitskovski. The companies involved in the project plan to sell the energy to individual customers or utilities.

The company began construction of the wind farm in September 2006, six months after the federal Environmental Protection Agency declared the site clean enough to be removed from the Superfund list, allowing the state Department of Environmental Conservation to oversee its development.

The windmills are a welcome change for an area buffeted by the loss of jobs and environmental problems since Bethlehem’s steep decline began in the mid-1970s as cheaper imported steel, mainly from Japan, began flooding the United States.

At its peak during World War II and through the boom years that followed, Bethlehem employed more than 20,000 people here, most living within walking distance of the plant. But as the jobs vanished, the city’s population fell from a high of 30,000 in the 1960s to about 19,000 today.

Smoke from the blast furnaces and coke ovens coated the mill town with a layer of red ore dust, and artificial clouds glowed several times each day, when rail cars tipped their loads of slag into Lake Erie, creating a lavalike flow visible from miles away.

"As a kid, we’d be at the beach and you’d see the ladle cars going out there 24 hours a day," said Michael Malyak, of Lackawanna’s Steel Plant Museum, who was a shipping clerk at Bethlehem for eight years before becoming an elementary school teacher. "The sky would light up, and you’d see this red-hot slag rolling down the hillside."

Mayor Polanski said that as dangerous and unhealthy as it was, "it was a way of life."
And one that passed through generations. Like many of his classmates, Mr. Polanski, who is 58, followed his father to Bethlehem, getting hired as an apprentice pipe fitter.
"I graduated in June of ’67, and at the end of July, I had a job at the steel plant," he said. "I never figured I’d lose that job."

But as the lower-priced imported steel began to dominate the market, Bethlehem started to shrink. About 7,300 workers lost their jobs when the company stopped making steel in Lackawanna, leaving only the coke ovens and several finishing mills in operation.
Bethlehem ended coke production in 2001, the year the company filed for bankruptcy. A much smaller mill that finishes galvanized steel and employs about 250 is now operated by Mittal Steel, which acquired Bethlehem’s assets in 2005 in a merger with International Steel Group.
About $300,000 in state and federal assistance was used to research wind patterns and evaluate the environmental impact, and the windmills each cost $4.5 million to build. Power lines left from the plant carry the electricity from the turbines, while paved roads, rail lines and an industrial port built by Bethlehem were used to bring much of the construction material to the site.

"It’s much easier to do this on farmland somewhere," Mr. Mitskovski said. "But all the things you would need to build in a green field setting are already here."
Steel Winds has permits to build two more turbines and plans to put up as many as 27 in all. This month, local officials announced plans to move a rail line and build new roads in an effort to open 400 more acres of brownfields at the former Bethlehem site for redevelopment and to revitalize the Lake Erie port there, which is large enough to handle eight oceangoing ships at a time.
The economic effect of the wind farm on this city will never rival that of the steel giant. Mr. Mitskovski estimated that Steel Winds will ultimately employ a few dozen people, compared with the tens of thousands who punched the clock at Bethlehem. And though there are incentives for clean energy production, taxes generated by the wind farm will never match those paid by the steel mill, which at one time subsidized most of Lackawanna’s government.
The greatest effect of the eight windmills, however, may have more to do with attitude.
"A community that has had difficulty moving forward has accepted a technology that leapfrogs other forms of energy generation," Mr. Mitskovski said. "Decades of steel-making created this environmental legacy. But that also created the opportunity to take this fallow, contaminated land and reuse it."

Monday

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)- EPA Awards $71 Million to Help Brownfields Bloom into Productivity

(Washington, D.C. - May 14, 2007) Communities in 38 states will receive brownfields grants to help revitalize former industrial and commercial sites, turning them from problem properties to productive community use.


Two territories and five tribal nations also will share the $70.7 million from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.


"By transforming thousands of blighted sites into engines of economic rebirth, EPA's Brownfields program is proving to be one of the greatest environmental success stories of the past decade," said Administrator Stephen L. Johnson. "These grants build on the Bush Administration's commitment of handing down a healthier, more prosperous future to the next generation of Americans."


Brownfields are sites where expansion, redevelopment, or reuse may be complicated by the presence or potential presence of hazardous substances, pollutants, or contaminants. In January 2002, President Bush signed the Small Business Liability Relief and Brownfields Revitalization Act, which authorizes annual funding for brownfields grants. The 2002 law expanded the definition of brownfields, so communities may now focus on mine-scarred lands or sites contaminated by petroleum or the manufacture and distribution of illegal drugs.


This year, 202 applicants were selected to receive 294 assessment, revolving loan fund, and cleanup grants. The $70.7 million will provide:

· 189 assessment grants totaling $36.8 million to be used to
conduct site assessment and planning for eventual cleanup at one or
more brownfields sites or as part of a community-wide effort.

· 92 cleanup grants totaling $17.9 million to provide funding
for grant recipients to carry out cleanup activities at brownfields
sites they own.


· 13 revolving loan fund grants totaling $16 million to
provide funding for communities to capitalize a revolving loan fund
and to provide subgrants to carry cleanup activities at brownfields
sites. Revolving loan funds are generally used to provide low
interest loans for brownfields cleanups.


The brownfields program encourages redevelopment of America’s estimated 450,000 abandoned and contaminated waste sites. Since the beginning of the program, EPA has awarded 1,067 assessment grants totaling more than


$262 million, 217 revolving loan fund grants totaling more than $201.7 million, and 336 cleanup grants totaling $61.3 million.


In addition to industrial and commercial redevelopment, brownfields approaches have included the conversion of industrial waterfronts to river-front parks, landfills to golf courses, rail corridors to recreational trails, and gas stations to housing. EPA’s brownfields assistance has leveraged more than $9.6 billion in cleanup and redevelopment, helped create more than 43,029 jobs and resulted in the assessment of more than 10,504 properties and the cleanup of 180 properties.

Information on the grant recipients: http://www.epa.gov/brownfields
R143


Note: If a link above doesn't work, please copy and paste the URL into a browser.

Wednesday

Welcome

Fellow Brownfields Coordinators,
I just wanted to extend a welcome to everyone who has had a chance to come to the new blog. I am looking forward to sharing ideas and best practices with cities across the country. Please feel free to leave me any messages on the new and improved site.

Thank you again.
-Ted Fischer
Program Manager
US Conference of Mayors