Exelon agrees to provide up to $3.5 million for
additional study of effects of Conowingo Dam on Chesapeake Bay water
quality; previously scheduled public hearing on company’s application
canceled, company says it must refile application within 90 days
BALTIMORE, MD – Recognizing
the Maryland Department of the Environment’s position that more
information on the effects of the Conowingo Dam is needed before it can
be determined whether the facility complies with State water quality
standards, Exelon Corporation has withdrawn its application for the
Water Quality Certification that is required as part of the relicensing
process for the dam and has agreed to fund additional study of the
issue.
MDE had stated its intention to deny the Proposed
Relicensing of the Conowingo Hydroelectric Project Application for Water
Quality Certification application due to insufficient information
provided by the applicant. The company said it will work with MDE to
coordinate the refiling of its application within 90 days. It has also
agreed to provide up to $3.5 million to study the effects of sediment
related to the Dam on water quality in the Susquehanna River and the
Chesapeake Bay.
MDE had scheduled a public hearing on Exelon’s
application for Water Quality Certification for Jan. 7, 2015, at the
Department’s Baltimore headquarters. Due to the withdrawal of the
application by Exelon, the hearing on the application is canceled. This
action does not affect the scheduled public meeting on the Lower
Susquehanna River Watershed Assessment draft report. The public meeting
on that draft report will still be held at 7 p.m. tomorrow, Dec. 9, at
Harford Community College.
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I hope some reliable data comes out of the study. I do not trust the government and I certainly do not trust Exelon.
ReplyDeleteMoney for a study....
ReplyDeleteAs fertilizing as the sediment....
Use the previous studies - start dredging!
Keep throwing money at studies until it tells you what you want to hear. Well the solution to the problem is clean out Conowingo Dam. Not much else to say here except you are now wasting time and our money. I wonder who is going to benefit most from that 3 million.
ReplyDeletewasteful spending again. we all know what the problem is, now FIX IT!!! leave us alone!!!
ReplyDelete