Scientific Assessment Concludes Energy Center is Safe for Area Residents
April 24, 2008
Elk Point, SD– A recently completed health risk assessment by Environmental
Resources Management (ERM), working with RTP Environmental Associates (RTP),
concludes that the Hyperion Energy Center poses no significant cancer risk to area residents
from exposure to emissions from the facility.
“We’re very encouraged by these findings,” said Hyperion Project Executive Preston
Phillips. “We know that the health of everyone who lives, works and plays near the energy
center is of utmost concern. To confirm – based on a scientifically sound assessment – that
the facility would be expected to increase cancer rates by less than one-in-a-million is
important to us and to the public.”
ERM’s findings have been submitted to Steven M. Pirner, Secretary of the South Dakota
Department of Environment and Natural Resources. DENR is the agency responsible for
issuing the air quality permit needed by the Hyperion Energy Center. The assessment is just
one of numerous documents already submitted to DENR, and the air quality permit is one
of several permit and approvals that must be obtained by Hyperion.
ERM is one of the world’s leading providers of environmental, risk, health and safety
consulting services. For this project ERM teamed with RTP, the nation’s leading experts in
the field of air quality dispersion modeling and permitting. The two companies served as
consultants to Hyperion.
In scientific vernacular, the report concludes that if 1,700,000 individuals resided at one of
the census block centroid locations outside of the facility during plant operations and were
present outside consistently for 24 hours per day for 70 years, one of those individuals
would be statistically expected to contract toxicant-mediated cancer as a result of inhalation
of emissions from the facility. In other words, ERM’s assessment shows that the likelihood
of any one individual contracting cancer as a result of the Hyperion Energy Center is less
than one in 1 million, the level established by the United States Environmental Protection
Agency as an acceptable level for residential communities.
“Our assessment was conducted pursuant to the established methodology used by the
Environmental Protection Agency to assess predicted health effects from refineries across
the U.S.,” said Todd Hall, the environmental expert who oversaw the assessment for ERM.
“Our environmental scientists and engineers worked with RTP to assess the potential cancer
risks and found that the predicted cancer risk levels were better than the thresholds
established by the Environmental Protection Agency for a residential setting.”
“We’re pleased that the report supports the underlying premise of our approach to
designing, building and operating the Hyperion Energy Center,” Phillips said. “We are
committed to achieving high environmental standards and the Energy Center will provide
Americans with the cleanest fuel, while having a very minimal impact on the environment
and, more importantly, the people who live near the facility.”
Copies of the report are available to the public and may be picked up at Hyperion’s office in
Elk Point or downloaded from the Energy Center website.
The Hyperion Energy Center will include a 400,000 barrel-per-day refinery producing ultralow
sulfur gasoline and diesel and an IGCC (Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle) power
plant. The center will incorporate green principles in its everyday functions and integrate the
most advanced commercially feasible emission control technologies in its operations.
Additional information on ERM is available at: http://www.erm.com
More information on RTP can be found at: http//www.rtpenv.com