Valley So Low

山谷如此低

99% Invisible

艺术

2025-01-29

33 分钟
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单集简介 ...

What went wrong in Kingston, Tennessee, and what does it reveal about the messy legacy of public utilities turned corporate giants?
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单集文稿 ...

  • This is 99% invisible.

  • I'm Roman Mars.

  • In 2008, a billion gallons of toxic sludge spewed across 300 acres of Tennessee in the middle of the night.

  • It was just before Christmas.

  • I was a senior in high school, and I remember seeing this billion gallons of sludge covering this town outside of Knoxville and thinking, wow, that looks awful.

  • That's Jared Sullivan.

  • For over 50 years, a power company called the Tennessee Valley Authority, or tva, had been burning coal at a power plant near Jared's hometown.

  • Burning all that coal helped bring electricity to the region, but it also created a mountain of ash and waste.

  • Over the years, this mountain grew to be 60ft high and 84 acres wide.

  • And on December 22, 2008, the earthen embankment that contained this mountain of waste collapsed.

  • A lethal wave of coal sludge inundated the countryside.

  • If you pull up the footage and look it up on YouTube or whatever, it really sticks with you because it is biblical in scope.

  • What happened.

  • This disaster came to be known as the Kingston Coal Ash spill.

  • And the culprit wasn't a private company.

  • It was the tva, a federally owned electricity provider that had been set up by the government during the New Deal.

  • Immediately after this happened, TVA's PR lackeys got on the news and basically said, this stuff isn't toxic.

  • No big deal.

  • Don't worry about it.

  • And 900 blue collar workers from around the country descended on the site to help clean it up.