By Lisa Sorg
Moncure, NC – With stands of loblolly pine, rivers, creeks and expanses of farm fields, southeastern Chatham County feels like the country. But this neck of the woods is home to many polluting industries: Arauco, a wood products company with a history of air quality violations; the Shearon Harris nuclear plant; the former Brickhaven mine, where 7.3 million tons of coal ash is buried in lined cells; Duke Energy’s now-defunct Cape Fear coal-fired power plant and an associated STAR facility, which burns the old fly ash for use in cement.
The Haw Riverkeeper routinely monitors sediment running off cleared land and into Gulf Creek, which feeds the Haw River. This picture was taken in September 2018. (Photo: Peter Theye)
Now a mega-project east of Moncure and near the Chatham-Wake County line would fill in wetlands and streams — in an area already prone to water pollution.
VinFast, an electric car manufacturer, plans to build a factory on 1,300 acres of forested land, currently used for timbering, near Old US Highway 1 and Corinth Road. It is expected to create 1,700 jobs and generate millions of dollars in tax revenue to the area.
“The VinFast project is an enormous site in Chatham County, with a mission to increase electric vehicles and reduce carbon emissions,” Haw Riverkeeper Emily Sutton said. “But this company that has touted an environmental conscience has submitted a proposal that would destroy thousands of feet of streams, cross the Haw River, and permanently fill dozens of acres of wetlands.”
Source: US Army Corps of Engineers report
1,300 acres — size of VinFast factory site
17 — number of streams within the site, totaling six linear miles
36 — wetland areas within the site, totaling 99 acres
7 — of those wetland areas rated as “high” quality
23 — of those wetland areas rated as “medium” quality
288 — linear feet of permanent streams that would be filled in to develop the factory site itself
6 — miles of new and upgraded roads to be built by NC DOT to serve the site
Half mile — length of stream channel filled in by those roads
23 — acres of wetlands, about the size of five Walmart Supercenters, within hardwood forests that would be destroyed by the road projects, plus one acre of pond
135 — Age in years of Merry Oaks Baptist Church, which, as the Chatham News & Record reported, would have to be uprooted and moved to accommodate the roads
15.75 — miles of new sewer extensions that would run from Sanford to provide utilities to the factory
10.8 — miles of new water lines from Sanford to the factory
9 — acres of wetlands that would be filled in as a result of the utility extension
2.24 — miles of new natural gas line required
54.4 — acres of wetland that must be mitigated as a result of the site, road and utility projects, plus another 7,022 linear feet of streams, equivalent to 1.3 miles
How mitigation works: The Clean Water Act requires developers of residential, commercial, transportation and energy projects to offset “unavoidable impacts” to streams or wetlands. They usually accomplish this by buying “credits” from the state Division of Mitigation Services (DMS) or private mitigation banks, of which there are roughly 20 in North Carolina.
DMS and the private banks generate and sell the credits by restoring, preserving or creating environmental projects in advance within the same watershed. They use the fees in part to fund additional mitigation projects for future projects.
In addition to US Army Corps of Engineer approval, the development, including the roadways, must receive several permits:
State water quality certification, known as a 401
Stormwater permits for the site itself from Chatham County; for the roadways, from the NC Department of Environmental Quality
Sedimentation and erosion control permits from DEQ
Site plan approval from Chatham County
This article was written by Lisa Sorg and first appeared in NC Policy Watch.
Reprinted here under Creative Commons Attribution