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Citing danger to freshwater, scientists say we need to put brakes on road salts

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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Every winter, de-icing salts — sodium chloride, calcium chloride and magnesium chloride — battle icy roads nationwide. The effort is epic in scope: Hundreds of millions of gallons of salty substances are sprayed on roads and billions of pounds of rock salt are spread on their surfaces each year. That may lead to safer roads, but it has a real effect on the planet. In a review in the journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, a group of environmental scientists looked at the hazards of salts that make driving safer.

Salt from icy roads is contaminating North America’s lakes
De-icing salts end up in bodies of fresh water, contaminating lakes and streams and building up in wetlands. The Environmental Protection Agency’s thresholds are not high enough to protect life in freshwater, the scientists write, and “there is also an urgent need to understand how freshwater organisms respond to novel chemical cocktails generated from road salt salinization.”
Then there’s drinking water.











When the researchers reviewed the scientific literature, they found that in many cases, drinking water salinity levels outstrip federal thresholds. The salt isn’t the only problem: Salts also increase the amount of elements such as cadmium, lead and even radium in groundwater. And because brackish drinking water can corrode plumbing, de-icing is linked to leaching of metals such as lead into the water supply in places such as Flint, Mich.
Flint has replaced over 10,000 lead pipes. Earning back trust is proving harder.
There may not be a way to end the use of de-icing salts, the researchers concede. But they say that with proper storage, mindful equipment calibration and different de-icing methods, such as pre-wetting roads or spraying salt brines before there’s ice on the ground, salts’ environmental impacts can be reduced.
One of the simplest solutions may also be the hardest to achieve. The public may need to “consider that our expectations during the winter may come at the cost of contaminating freshwater ecosystems.”







Is the public prepared to trade completely clear roads for cleaner water? It won’t be an easy choice. Either way, the “magnitude of the road salt contamination issue is substantial and requires immediate attention,” says the study’s lead author, Bill Hintz of the University of Toledo, in a news release.

 
For a while, they had planned on using beet juice. Wonder what happened to that?
 
For a while, they had planned on using beet juice. Wonder what happened to that?
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I think that solar heated roads, at least for highways and heavily traveled roads, are probably the future. I thought that the Iowa DOT had commissioned a stretch of I-35 to be solar heated as a study after the pileup two (?) years ago that resulted in one death, miles of backups, and people stranded for almost a day? Having trouble finding something on the Internet about it now, but I feel confident that I read something a few years ago.
 
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I need to show this to my wife. She spread a half a ton of salt on our driveway, steps, and sidewalk yesterday. It's just sitting there today because the sun came out today and did the work naturally.
Roads need to be treated, but some restraint needs to be shown in other areas.
 
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I think that solar heated roads, at least for highways and heavily traveled roads, are probably the future. I thought that the Iowa DOT had commissioned a stretch of I-35 to be solar heated as a study after the pileup two (?) years ago that resulted in one death, miles of backups, and people stranded for almost a day? Having trouble finding something on the Internet about it now, but I feel confident that I read something a few years ago.
There is no way that would work financially. I can’t heat my drive and walkway with the solar from my house and I live somewhere where the temperature is normally above freezing when snow on the ground and where there is great solar exposure.
 
If anything I hear people bitch that the roads aren't treated fast enough. This is a politically dead issue even though it probably shouldn't be. I do my part and work from home.
 
Let's put it this way, there are two solutions: treat the roads with another substance, or don't treat at all (just use sand). The no treat at all is the easiest and best to solve this problem but with our current commuter society impossible.
 
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