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Bailey conceded there are no guarantees against leaks in the levees but said they are inspected daily by workers who look for potential trouble spots. State and federal regulators inspect the levees at least twice a year. In Louisiana, the Noranda Aluminum Corp. runs an alumina refinery on the bank of the Mississippi River at Gramercy. The facility was inspected last week by the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality and no problems were found, said Sam Phillips, the solid waste administrator at the agency. "The good news is that I'm not aware of any red mud lake failure in the United States," he said. In Gramercy, the sludge is contained in four large ponds, or red mud lakes, covering about 920 acres. Phillips said an accident like the one in Hungary would be highly unlikely at the Gramercy plant. He said the clay levees containing the lakes are built at a grade, stability and height designed to contain the sludge. The facility has been through two major hurricanes
-- Katrina in 2005 and Gustav in 2008 -- and was able to handle the rain that fell, he added. "The situation you saw there (in Hungary) would not happen here because of the levee design and the water removal," Phillips said. Another difference: Louisiana and Texas aren't hilly. "It's so flat here that it would be that hard to get that kind of energy mass built up that you have in a mountain area," Phillips said.
[Associated
Press;
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