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The pH level of the water where the slurry entered the Danube was 9
-- well below the 13.5 measured in local waterways hit Monday by the toxic torrent, Hungarian rescue agency spokesman Tibor Dobson told the state MTI news agency on Friday. Dobson added that such amounts posed no damage to the environment. A neutral pH level for water is 7, with normal readings ranging from 6.5 to 8.5. Each pH number is 10 times the previous level, so a pH of 13 is 1,000 times more alkaline than a pH of 10. Emergency crews, meanwhile, drained a second industrial reservoir at Hungary's red sludge site Friday to prevent a new disaster. Dobson told MTI that 100,000 cubic meters (3.5 million cubic feet) of fluid from a storage pond close to the burst reservoir was being gradually released into a local river already declared dead in the wake of Monday's environmental catastrophe. Gypsum was being dropped into the Marcal River from helicopters to neutralize the alkaline effect of the fluid, he said. At monitoring stations in Croatia, Serbia and Romania, officials were taking river samples every few hours. An environmental group that monitors threats to the Danube said the breached reservoir was on a 2006 watch list of some 100 industrial sites at risk for accidents that could contaminate the 1,775-mile (2,856-kilometer)-long Danube. The International Commission for the Protection of the Danube River coordinates conservation efforts in the 10 nations bordering the waterway and its tributaries.
The long-term effects on the agricultural region will be devastating. Some 2,000 acres (809 hectares) of topsoil will have to be dug up and replaced because the highly alkaline sludge had killed off all the nutrients and organisms needed to keep the soil healthy, according to Illes, the environment minister. It is still not known what caused a section of the reservoir to collapse, unleashing a torrent of sludge. Three people are still missing. More than 150 were treated for burns and other injuries, and 10 were still in serious condition. Crews looking for the missing drained a pond swollen by the muck Friday but no bodies were found.
[Associated
Press;
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