Tyson Foods dumps millions of pounds of toxic pollutants into US rivers and lakes (1 Viewer)

Optimus Prime

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Tyson Foods dumped millions of pounds of toxic pollutants directly into American rivers and lakes over the last five years, threatening critical ecosystems, endangering wildlife and human health, a new investigation reveals.

Nitrogen, phosphorus, chloride, oil and cyanide were among the 371m lb of pollutants released into waterways by just 41 Tyson slaughterhouses and mega processing plants between 2018 and 2022.

According to research by the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), the contaminants were dispersed in 87bn gallons of wastewater – which also contains blood, bacteria and animal feces – and released directly into streams, rivers, lakes and wetlands relied on for drinking water, fishing and recreation. The UCS analysis, shared exclusively with the Guardian, is based on the most recent publicly available water pollution data Tyson is required to report under current regulations.


The wastewater was enough to fill about 132,000 Olympic-size pools, according to a Guardian analysis.

The water pollution from Tyson, a Fortune 100 company and the world’s second largest meat producer, was spread across 17 states but about half the contaminants were dumped into streams, rivers, lakes and wetlands in Nebraska, Illinois and Missouri.

The midwest is already saturated with nitrogen and phosphorus from industrial agriculture – factory farms and synthetics fertilizers – contributing to algal blooms that clog critical water infrastructure, exacerbate respiratory conditions like asthma, and deplete oxygen levels in the sea causing marine life to suffocate and die.

Yet the UCS research is only the tip of iceberg, including water pollution from only one in three of the corporation’s slaughterhouses and processing plants, and only 2% of the total nationwide……..


 
Tyson Foods dumped millions of pounds of toxic pollutants directly into American rivers and lakes over the last five years, threatening critical ecosystems, endangering wildlife and human health, a new investigation reveals.

Nitrogen, phosphorus, chloride, oil and cyanide were among the 371m lb of pollutants released into waterways by just 41 Tyson slaughterhouses and mega processing plants between 2018 and 2022.

According to research by the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), the contaminants were dispersed in 87bn gallons of wastewater – which also contains blood, bacteria and animal feces – and released directly into streams, rivers, lakes and wetlands relied on for drinking water, fishing and recreation. The UCS analysis, shared exclusively with the Guardian, is based on the most recent publicly available water pollution data Tyson is required to report under current regulations.


The wastewater was enough to fill about 132,000 Olympic-size pools, according to a Guardian analysis.

The water pollution from Tyson, a Fortune 100 company and the world’s second largest meat producer, was spread across 17 states but about half the contaminants were dumped into streams, rivers, lakes and wetlands in Nebraska, Illinois and Missouri.

The midwest is already saturated with nitrogen and phosphorus from industrial agriculture – factory farms and synthetics fertilizers – contributing to algal blooms that clog critical water infrastructure, exacerbate respiratory conditions like asthma, and deplete oxygen levels in the sea causing marine life to suffocate and die.

Yet the UCS research is only the tip of iceberg, including water pollution from only one in three of the corporation’s slaughterhouses and processing plants, and only 2% of the total nationwide……..


Doesn't surprise me. Companies in America want to dumb us down and don't mind killing a bunch of us. Do a comparison between a product sold here and sold in the UK. We're being poisoned on purpose.
 
At this point anything short of corporations actively kidnapping homeless people to breed off the books children to raise for their CEOs to hunt for sport will not shock me.

And even that would only give me brief pause.
 
Surprise, giant food companies don't have our best interests at heart. Just like any and all giant companies, including huge chemical companies, huge pharma companies and more. It's so funny when you see nutritionists and doctors defend these companies by saying things like there is no bad food, or that ultra processed foods can be good for you, or that micro plastics in our water/food is just a conspiracy theory.

Just watch, once they start making highly processed proteins from bugs people will get on board and trust the same type of companies like Tyson.
 
Surprise, giant food companies don't have our best interests at heart. Just like any and all giant companies, including huge chemical companies, huge pharma companies and more. It's so funny when you see nutritionists and doctors defend these companies by saying things like there is no bad food, or that ultra processed foods can be good for you, or that micro plastics in our water/food is just a conspiracy theory.
Oh, and eggs are bad for you. Bull.
 
Oh, and eggs are bad for you. Bull.
Did you see the stories a while back trying to claim that raising your own chickens or growing your own food was 6 times worse for the environment than huge monocrop mega corp farms?

 
Did you see the stories a while back trying to claim that raising your own chickens or growing your own good was 6 times worse for the environment than huge monocrop mega corp farms?

Man, I saw an article one time saying you could die from gardening.
 
Did you see the stories a while back trying to claim that raising your own chickens or growing your own food was 6 times worse for the environment than huge monocrop mega corp farms?

But it's from science daily - that has to be legit

Science is right in the name
 
Curious what Tysons response to this report will be

Also curious what repercussions, fines, penalties from this will be and Tysons response to those

I'm sure some version of "if you hurt us you'll be hurting the people who work here" (I'm sure these plants are in more rural areas and probably one of if not the largest employer in that area)

"If you hurt us you'll be hurting the millions of people who buy our products" (I'm sure any fine or loss of profit will just be passed on to the consumer)
 
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