Transcript Slide 1
Washington State Department of Ecology March 2011 SOSC Report 2010 Spill review Washington 2010 Spills Reported Spills: 3,742 Spills with Response: 3,694 Field Response: 932 (25%) Percentage of Spills by Product Type Spills by Product Type Breakdown by Oil Type Unknown 3,9% LNG 0,4% Sewage/manure 3.2% Crude Oil 0,2% Other 7% Air pollutant 0,8% Unknown 12,3% Drug Lab 2,7% Vegetable Oil 1,1% Waste Oil 1,7% Chemical/Hazmat 9.2% Gasoline/Av gas 12,1% Other Oil 9,0% Oil = 66% Waste Water 6% Transformer Bunker Oil 0,4% Oil 0,6% Natural Phenomenon 1% Lube/Motor Oil 9,7% Fuel Oil 1,1% Pesticide 0,2% Pesticide Natural Phenomenon Waste Water Chemical/Hazmat Drug Lab Air Pollutant Other Diesel 27,5% Mineral Oil 8,9% Includes pesticides, herbicides, insecticides and fungicides Includes algae and natural decomposition Includes bilge waste, wastewater, mud and silt Includes poison gases, flammable materials, chlorofluorocarbons, fertilizers, antifreeze, batteries, lead, mercury and other heavy metals Includes methamphetamine labs and waste dump sites Includes chemical air releases, odor complaints, smoke, exhaust and dust Includes medical wastes, waxes, lard, garbage and debris Hydraulic 13,2% Jet Fuel 1,9% Data source: Ecology Environmental Reports Tracking System (ERTS). Percentage reflects 2010 data for spills with impacts to surfaces including water, soil, impermeable, air etc. Number of Reported Incidents by Source Type (2010) Abandoned Drums/Cylinders, 66 Fire/Burning, 83 Agriculture, 36 Natural Phenomenon, 36 Above/below Ground Storage Tanks, 93 Drug Lab, 105 Transportation (truck, car, rail, air), 812 Wastewater/Sewage, 107 Oil Handling (refinery, pipeline, retail), 183 Private Property, 227 Commercial/Industrial, 612 Public agency/municipality, 233 Unknown/Other, 539 Vessels, 610 Data source: Ecology Environmental Reports Tracking System (ERTS). 2010 data for spills with impacts to surfaces including water, soil, impermeable, air etc. Recent Lessons Learned • Field response rate down 10% (35 – 25%) • Partially due to FTE reduction • Responses more complex • Incident Management Team depth