Minnesota Beet Co-op To Pay $1.5M For Pollution Violations
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — The Southern Minnesota Beet Sugar Cooperative has agreed to pay $1.5 million to settle air and water quality violations.
The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced the settlement Thursday.
The co-op near Renville also has agreed to correct the violations, which happened over a period of years. Those violations included excessive hydrogen sulfide emissions — which cause foul odors and can be harmful to human health — and discharging untreated wastewater, which resulted in a fish kill in Beaver Creek in 2013.
The cooperative said in a statement that it takes its responsibilities to the state and the region "very seriously." The co-op has more than 500 shareholders who produce about three million tons of sugar beets annually.
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