Current:Home > FinanceGroup says it intends to sue US agencies for failing to assess Georgia plant’s environmental impact -TradeWisdom
Group says it intends to sue US agencies for failing to assess Georgia plant’s environmental impact
View
Date:2025-04-12 22:09:13
SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) — A Georgia conservation group Monday filed notice of its intent to sue two U.S. government agencies, saying they failed to properly assess the environmental impacts of the $7.6 billion electric vehicle and battery plant Hyundai is building outside Savannah.
The Ogeechee Riverkeeper accuses the Army Corps of Engineers of issuing a permit to fill or dredge wetlands on the plant site using outdated data that failed to consider the project’s final scale. And it says the agency wrongly assumed the project would have a negligible impact on the region’s groundwater supply.
The environmental group also says the U.S. Treasury Department dispersed millions of dollars in infrastructure grants benefitting the project without performing required environmental reviews.
“Any activities related to this project should be immediately halted until these crucial steps are properly completed,” said a letter addressed to the agencies’ leaders by Donald D.J. Stack, an attorney representing the conservation group.
Hyundai Motor Group broke ground in 2022 on its first U.S. factory devoted to building electric vehicles and the batteries that power them. The South Korean automaker has said it hopes to begin production before the end of this year in Bryan County west of Savannah.
Ultimately, Hyundai plans to have 8,000 workers producing 300,000 EVs per year at the Georgia site, making it the largest economic development project the state has ever tackled. The plant site sprawls across more than 2,900 acres (1,170 hectares).
Spokespersons for Hyundai and the two federal agencies named in the environmental group’s letter did not immediately respond to email messages seeking comment Monday evening.
The letter says the group plans to file suit after 60 days if construction of the Hyundai plant isn’t halted while the Army Corps and Treasury Department perform updated environmental reviews.
“When we find out that permit applicants withhold important information in an application and the permitting agency hasn’t done their due diligence, we will call them out and use the law to hold them accountable,” Damon Mullis, the riverkeeper group’s executive director, said in a statement.
The group’s letter says the Army Corps granted the project’s permit in 2022 largely using information from a 2019 application submitted by a local agency before there was a deal with Hyundai to build in Georgia. It says the project grew by more than 500 acres (202 hectares) in that period.
The riverkeeper group’s letter also says the Army Corps “severely underestimated” impacts to the area’s water supply. It says agency granted a permit without information on how much water the plant would use, wrongly assuming a “negligible” impact that Bryan County’s local water system could accommodate.
However, Georgia environmental regulators are now considering permit applications for four wells in a neighboring county that would allow the Hyundai plant to withdraw a combined 6.5 million gallons of water per day. They would come from the groundwater aquifer that’s the region’s main source of drinking water.
The riverkeeper group says the Treasury Department violated the National Environmental Policy Act by failing to review the project’s impacts before dispersing an estimated $240 million in grant funding to help pay for water and wastewaters infrastructure improvements benefitting the Hyundai plant.
veryGood! (61234)
Related
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Early morning shooting kills woman and wounds 4 others in Los Angeles County
- Pakistan election officials reject former prime minister Khan’s candidacy in parliamentary election
- AP PHOTOS: Dancing with the bears lives on as a unique custom in Romania
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Georgia football stomps undermanned Florida State in Orange Bowl
- Horoscopes Today, December 29, 2023
- Cowboys deny Lions on 2-point try for 20-19 win to extend home win streak to 16
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Israeli strikes in central Gaza kill at least 35 as Netanyahu says war will continue for months
Ranking
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Michigan giving 'big middle finger' to its critics with College Football Playoff run
- The Baltimore Ravens are making a terrible mistake honoring Ray Rice. He's no 'legend'
- Taliban say security forces killed dozens of Tajiks, Pakistanis involved in attacks in Afghanistan
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Music producers push for legal protections against AI: There's really no regulation
- Sen. Fetterman says he thought news about his depression treatment would end his political career
- Texas' Arch Manning is the Taylor Swift of backup quarterbacks
Recommendation
'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
On New Year’s Eve, DeSantis urges crowd to defy odds and help him ‘win the Iowa caucuses’
Ireland Could Become the Next Nation to Recognize the Rights of Nature and a Human Right to a Clean Environment
South Korea’s capital records heaviest single-day snowfall in December for 40 years
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco Embrace in New Photo Amid Blossoming Romance
‘Wonka’ ends the year No. 1 at the box office, 2023 sales reach $9 billion in post-pandemic best
Lithium-ion battery fire in a cargo ship’s hold is out after several days of burning