(Austin) Sierra Club and representatives of pecan growers and producers in Fayette and Colorado Counties in the Texas Pecan Alliance requested at an Austin City Hall press conference today compensation for losses resulting from pollution from the Lower Colorado River Authority (LCRA) and City of Austin’s Fayette Power Project coal plant.
“Over two dozen orchards and the livelihoods of my family and many of our neighbors have been seriously impacted by the pollution from Fayette coal plant,” said Harvey Hayek of Hayek Farm and the Texas Pecan Alliance. “In
1980, the year after the coal plant went on line, we saw
the abundant production out here drop and then in the Nineties,
the trees began to die. Recently, I had to buy a bag of pecans
at H.E.B. so my wife could make cookies.”
Hayek and almost 50 people in the Texas Pecan Alliance met with LCRA officials and engineers from Austin Energy and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) on November 16. Since the meeting, the TCEQ is considering additional monitoring, members of Austin City Council have set up meetings for further discussion, and the LCRA has denied Fayette coal plant contributed to pecan industry losses.
Dr. Neil Carman chemist and Clean Air Program Director, biochemical injury process, "Acid
pollution from the coal plant falls on the leaves causing
damage characterized by brown, dead spots, while the sulfur
dioxide (SO2) gas from the plant emissions enters the sensitive
leaf structure from underneath, biochemically attacking the
leaves from within and eventually causing leaf loss and the
death of the tree."
Mr. Hayek explained that it takes 220 leaves to produce a single pecan nut on a tree.
“This orchard has been in my wife’s family for the
past century. We want to recover from this damage. We want
the air, water, and soil to be clean and safe enough to replant
so my grandchildren can enjoy the abundance we enjoyed,” said Hayek.
Hayek, Carman, and others in the Texas Pecan Alliance also expressed concerns about corrosion, water quality, coal ash waste, and human health.
Eva Hernandez, with the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal campaign
in Texas said, “The
pecan industry losses clearly show one of many direct economic
blows from burning coal for electricity. From the Clean Air
Task Force study, we also know that every year,
Fayette coal plant pollution is linked to almost 1,000 heart
attacks, asthma attacks, cases of chronic bronchitis, hospital
admissions, emergency room visits, and 37 early deaths. There
are direct costs associated with these health impacts and
we are talking about a devastating reduction in quality of
life. We can do better and we deserve better. LCRA and City
of Austin must phase out Fayette coal plant by 2020 and completely
develop our energy efficiency and renewable energy future
-- particularly solar power.”
Texas Pecan Alliance representatives from Fayette and Colorado county today delivered ‘Vanishing
Pecan Pies’ baked by Austin residents calling themselves the Pecan Posse to the Mayor and Austin City Council Members, Cheryl Mele, Chief Operating Officer of Austin Energy, the City Manager’s office, and to the LCRA. They explained that the pies symbolized “the
growing awareness in Austin about Fayette coal plant pollution and growing support for clean air and sustainable conditions
for local food.”